Dicerobatis Giornae (gcide) | Ox \Ox\ ([o^]ks), n.; pl. Oxen. [AS. oxa; akin to D. os. G.
    ochs, ochse, OHG. ohso, Icel. oxi, Sw. & Dan. oxe, Goth.
    a['u]hsa, Skr. ukshan ox, bull; cf. Skr. uksh to sprinkle.
    [root]214. Cf. Humid, Aurochs.] (Zool.)
    The male of bovine quadrupeds, especially the domestic animal
    when castrated and grown to its full size, or nearly so. The
    word is also applied, as a general name, to any species of
    bovine animals, male and female.
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          All sheep and oxen, yea, and the beasts of the field.
                                                   --Ps. viii. 7.
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    Note: The castrated male is called a steer until it attains
          its full growth, and then, an ox; but if castrated
          somewhat late in life, it is called a stag. The male,
          not castrated, is called a bull. These distinctions are
          well established in regard to domestic animals of this
          genus. When wild animals of this kind are spoken of, ox
          is often applied both to the male and the female. The
          name ox is never applied to the individual cow, or
          female, of the domestic kind. Oxen may comprehend both
          the male and the female.
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    Grunting ox (Zool.), the yak.
 
    Indian ox (Zool.), the zebu.
 
    Javan ox (Zool.), the banteng.
 
    Musk ox. (Zool.) See under Musk.
 
    Ox bile. See Ox gall, below.
 
    Ox gall, the fresh gall of the domestic ox; -- used in the
       arts and in medicine.
 
    Ox pith, ox marrow. [Obs.] --Marston.
 
    Ox ray (Zool.), a very large ray (Dicerobatis Giornae) of
       Southern Europe. It has a hornlike organ projecting
       forward from each pectoral fin. It sometimes becomes
       twenty feet long and twenty-eight feet broad, and weighs
       over a ton. Called also sea devil.
 
    To have the black ox tread on one's foot, to be
       unfortunate; to know what sorrow is (because black oxen
       were sacrificed to Pluto). --Leigh Hunt.
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