ant·ler /ˈæntlɚ/
鹿角,鹿角的叉枝
Ant·ler n. Zool. The entire horn, or any branch of the horn, of a cervine animal, as of a stag.
Huge stags with sixteen antlers. --Macaulay.
Note: ☞ The branch next to the head is called the brow antler, and the branch next above, the bez antler, or bay antler. The main stem is the beam, and the branches are often called tynes. Antlers are deciduous bony (not horny) growths, and are covered with a periosteum while growing. See Velvet.
Antler moth Zool., a destructive European moth (Cerapteryx graminis), which devastates grass lands.
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antler
n : deciduous horn of a member of the deer family