Dictionary Definition
mare
Noun
1 female equine animal [syn: female
horse]
2 a dark region of considerable extent on the
surface of the moon [syn: maria]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Old English mearh. Cognate with German Mähre, Dutch merrie, and related to Old French mare (horse), Breton march (horse), Welsh march (horse).Pronunciation
- /mE@/
- /'mɛəɻ/
Translations
female horse
- Albanian: pelë
- Breton: kazeg
- Catalan: euga
- Crimean Tatar: baytal
- Croatian: kobila
- Czech: klisna , kobyla
- Danish: hoppe
- Dutch: merrie
- Erzya: эльде (elyde)
- Faroese: ryssa
- Finnish: tamma
- French: jument
- German: Stute , Mähre italbrac old mare
- Greek: φοράδα (foráða)
- Guaraní: kavaju kuña
- Hungarian: kanca
- Icelandic: hryssa , meri
- Interlingua: cavalla
- Italian: cavalla
- Korean: 암말 (ammal)
- Lithuanian: kumelė
- Macedonian: кобила
- Maori: hoiho uwha
- Norwegian: hoppe
- Polish: klacz
- Portuguese: égua
- Romanian: iapă
- Russian: кобыла (kobýla)
- Scottish Gaelic: làir
- Slovak: kobyla
- Slovene: kobila
- Spanish: yegua
- Swedish: märr , sto
- Telugu: ఆడ గుర్రం (aaDa gurraM)
- Turkish: kısrak
- Welsh: caseg
Etymology 2
From mare.Pronunciation
- /mA:reI/
- /'marɛ/
Noun
Catalan
Etymology
From mater.Noun
mareCorsican
Noun
mareDanish
Noun
mareDutch
Pronunciation
French
Pronunciation
Noun
fr-noun fItalian
Pronunciation
Declension
Sonsorolese
Noun
mareExtensive Definition
- For other uses, see mare (disambiguation).
Most of the time, a mare is a female horse over
the age of three, and a filly is a female horse age three
and younger. However, in Thoroughbred
horse
racing, a mare is defined as a female horse more than four years old; in
harness
racing a mare is a female horse more than three years old. The
word can also be used for other female equine animals, particularly
mules and zebras, though a female donkey is usually called a
"jenny." A broodmare is a mare used for breeding.
An adult male horse is called a stallion,
or, if castrated, a
gelding. Occasionally
the term "horse" is used in a restrictive sense to designate only a
male horse.
Reproductive cycle
Mares carry their young, called foals for approximately 11 months from conception to birth. (Average range 320-370 days.) Usually just one young is born; twins are rare. When a domesticated mare foals, she nurses the foal for at least four to six months before it is weaned, though mares in the wild may allow a foal to nurse for up to a year.The estrous
cycle, also known as "season' or "heat" of a mare occurs
roughly every 19-22 days and occurs from early spring into autumn.
As the days shorten, most mares enter an anestrus period during the
winter and thus do not cycle in this period. The reproductive cycle
in a mare is controlled by the photoperiod (length of the
day), the cycle first triggered when the days begin to lengthen. As
the days shorten, the mare returns to the anestrus period when she
is not sexually receptive. Anestrus prevents the mare from
conceiving in the winter months, as that would result in her
foaling during the harshest part of the year, a time when it would
be most difficult for the foal to survive.
However, for most competitive purposes, foals are
given an official "birthday" of January 1 (August 1 in the Southern
hemisphere), and many breeders want foals to be born as early
in the year as possible. Therefore, many breeding farms begin to
put mares "under lights" in late winter in order to bring them out
of anestrus early and allow conception to occur in February or
March. One exception to this general rule is the field of endurance
riding, which requires horses to be 60 true calendar months old
(5 years) before competing at longer distances.
Fillies are sexually
mature by age two and are sometimes bred at that age, but
generally should not be bred until they themselves have stopped
growing, usually by age four or five.
A healthy, well-managed mare can produce a foal
every year into her twenties, though not all breeders will breed a
mare every year. In addition, many mares are kept for riding and so
are not bred annually, as a mare in late pregnancy or nursing a foal is
not able to perform at as athletic a standard as one who is neither
pregnant nor lactating. In addition, some
mares become anxious
when separated from their foals, even temporarily, and thus are
difficult to manage under saddle until their foals are
weaned.
Behavior
seealso horse behavior Mares are considered easier to handle than stallions. However, geldings have no hormone-driven behavior patterns at all, thus sometimes they are preferred to both mares and stallions. Mares have a notorious, if generally undeserved, reputation for being "marish," meaning that they can be cranky or unwilling when they come into season. However, there is considerable evidence that much "marish" behavior is the mostly result of humans expecting or allowing the mare to misbehave. Because horses in general are very attuned to the emotional state of their riders, expectation by a rider of difficult manners during estrus can create a self-fulfilling prophecy and a cranky mare.While a few mares may be somewhat more
distractable or irritable when in heat, they are far less easily
distracted than a stallion at any time. Solid training usually
minimizes hormonal behavior. For competitive purposes, mares are
sometimes placed on hormone
therapies, such as the drug Regumate, to help control
hormonally-based behavior. Some riders also use various herbal
remedies, most of which have not been extensively tested for
effectiveness.
Some mare owners claim that mares are more
intelligent and courageous and will work harder for their owners,
and there are many stories and legends about the loyalty of a mare
to her rider. Conversely, others claim that mares are more nervous
and high-strung. In short, much lore about "marish" mares is due to
simple anthropomorphism,
attributing stereotypically "female" behavior to mares.
Mares and geldings can be pastured together.
However, mares may be a bit more territorial. Sex-segregating herds
may make for less infighting, especially if kept in close quarters.
However, studies also have shown that when a "lead mare" or "boss
mare" is in charge of a herd, all remaining animals rest for longer
periods and seem more at ease than do those in herds led by a
gelding.
In wild herds, a "boss mare" or "lead mare" leads
the band to grazing, to water, and away from danger. She eats and
drinks first, decides when the herd will move and to where. The
herd stallion usually brings up the rear and acts as a defender of
the herd against predators and other stallions.
Uses
Mares are used in every equestrian sport and usually compete equally with stallions and geldings in most events, though some competitions may offer classes open only to one sex of horse or another, particularly in breeding or "in-hand" conformation classes. In horse racing, mares and fillies have their own races and only a small percentage compete against male horses. However, fillies have won classic horse races against colts, including the Kentucky Derby, the Belmont Stakes and the Melbourne Cup.Mares are used as dairy animals in some cultures,
especially by the nomads
and formerly nomadic peoples of Central
Asia. Fermented mare's milk, known as kumis, is the national drink of
Kyrgyzstan. Some
mares, usually of draft horse
breeding, are kept in North America for the production of their
urine. Pregnant mares' urine is the active
ingredient in the hormonal drug Premarin (derived
from Pregnant mares' urine).
Historic use
Until the invention of castration and even later where there was less cultural acceptance of the practice, mares were less difficult to manage than stallions and thus preferred for most ordinary work. Historically, the Bedouin nomads of the Arabian peninsula preferred mares on their raids, because stallions would nicker to the opposing camps' horses, whereas mares would be quiet. However, other cultures preferred male horses over mares either due to a desire for more aggressive behavior in a fighting animal, or to not be inconvenienced with a loss of work ability due to a mare's pregnancy, parturition and lactation.Etymology
The word mare, meaning "female horse," originated from the Gaulish language and took several forms prior to A.D. 900. In Old English the form was mere or mȳre, the feminine forms for mearh (horse). The Old German form of the word was Mähre. Similarly, in Irish and Gaelic, the word was marc, and in Welsh, march. The word has no known cognates beyond Germanic and Celtic. Some derived terms are a mare's nest, an expression for "excitement over something which does not exist"; and nightmare, which began as a term meaning "an evil female spirit afflicting sleepers with a feeling of suffocation." However, this term may not be directly connected etymologically with the word for female horse, but rather to homophones that meant "incubus" or "goblin."A homograph that has nothing to
do with female horses confuses the etymology of the word. This is
the Latin
word "mare"
(pronounced "ma-re", two syllables), which is used primarily in
astronomy and
describes the large, dark, basaltic plains on Earth's
Moon. It is
the Latin word for "sea", from which words like marine
and maritime
were also derived.
See also
References
mare in Danish: Hoppe
mare in German: Stute
mare in Japanese: 牝馬
mare in Dutch: Merrie
mare in Norwegian: Hoppe
mare in Polish: Klacz
mare in Slovak: Kobyla (samica)
mare in Swedish: Sto
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Houyhnhnm, Partlet, alkali flat, alluvial
plain, basin, biddy, bitch, bossy, bottomland, brood mare,
bushveld, campo, champaign, champaign country,
charger, coastal plain,
colt, courser, cow, critter, delta, desert, dobbin, doe, down, downs, entire, entire horse, equine, ewe, ewe lamb, fell, filly, flat, flat country, flatland, flats, foal, gelding, grass veld, grassland, guinea hen,
gyp, heath, heifer, hen, hind, horse, jenny, lande, level, lioness, llano, lowland, lowlands, lunar mare, mesa, mesilla, moor, moorland, mount, nag, nanny, nanny goat, open country,
pampa, pampas, peahen, peneplain, plain, plains, plateau, playa, prairie, prancer, roe, salt flat, salt marsh, salt
pan, savanna, sebkha, she-bear, she-goat,
she-lion, slut, sow, stallion, steed, steppe, stud, studhorse, table, tableland, tarpan, tigress, top horse, tree veld,
tundra, upland, vega, veld, vixen, war-horse, weald, wide-open spaces, wild
horse, wold