hermaphrodite
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++her·maph·ro·dite /hɜːˈmæfrədaɪt $ hɜːr-/ noun [countable] HBSEX/GENDERa living thing that has both male and female sexual organs 雌雄同体[同株]的生物 —hermaphrodite adjective
Examples from the Corpus
hermaphrodite• Were I a plant, the question might not arise: Most plants are hermaphrodites.• That warlock was a bloated, horned hermaphrodite draped in bilious green skin.• Soon the population consists of hermaphrodites and females, the latter possessing the male-killing gene.• The research began after the discovery of hermaphrodite carp next to a large sewage outfall.• Potentially the hermaphrodite dissolves gender difference and, at least in its associated idea of androgyny, has become acceptable.• The plants have two types: hermaphrodite and female.• If we were hermaphrodites, everybody would be a potential partner.Origin hermaphrodite (1400-1500) Latin hermaphroditus, from Greek Hermaphroditos, the son of the ancient Greek god Hermes and the goddess Aphrodite, who became joined in body with the female nature spirit Salmacisher·maph·ro·dite nounChineseSyllable
thing a that living both and Corpus has male
hermaphrodite
her‧maph‧ro‧dite /hɜːˈmæfrədaɪt $ hɜːr-/
noun [countable]
—hermaphrodite adjective
her‧maph‧ro‧dite /hɜːˈmæfrədaɪt $ hɜːr-/
noun [countable] Date: 1400-1500
Language: Latin
Origin: hermaphroditus, from Greek Hermaphroditos, the son of the ancient Greek god Hermes and the goddess Aphrodite, who became joined in body with the female nature spirit Salmacis
a living thing that has both male and female sexual organsLanguage: Latin
Origin: hermaphroditus, from Greek Hermaphroditos, the son of the ancient Greek god Hermes and the goddess Aphrodite, who became joined in body with the female nature spirit Salmacis
—hermaphrodite adjective