See also: man-eating

English

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Etymology

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From man +‎ eating.

Adjective

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maneating (not comparable)

  1. Alternative form of man-eating
    • 1907, Fur-fish-game, volumes 5-6, page 129:
      Well known maneating tigers were killed in several districts.
    • 1959, John Taylor, Maneaters and marauders, snippet
      A big maneating croc had appeared in the lagoon of Lifumba
    • 1998, Stephen P Fishelman, The Measure of Man, page 84:
      They reflect what we are, maneating gods the gods of maneating men, beautiful Olympians the gods of the first humanists.

Noun

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maneating (uncountable)

  1. The consumption of human flesh by animals
    • 1993, Arjan Singh, The legend of the maneater, page 83:
      Corbett described maneating as the compulsive seeking of human flesh by carnivores
    • 2002, Hans Kruuk, Hunter and hunted: relationships between carnivores and people, page 75:
      In general, maneating is only an infinitesimally small factor of mortality amongst people.

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