murid
noun
- a rodent in the Muridae family (rats and mice)
Wiktionary
adj
Etymology: An appellativization from Murid(ae) minus -ae (a pattern that recurs with many -idae names); by surface analysis, ending in suffix -id.
- Of or belonging to the family Muridae.
“The theory of faunal dominance holds that while evolution occurs everywhere, certain land masses generate disproportionately more terrestrial and aquatic groups, such as the familiar murid rodents and ranid frogs, which are able to colonize and dominate other land masses.”
“Calhoun, an endlessly inventive designer of experiments, built an enclosure outfitted with rat apartments and partitioned the pen into connected “neighborhoods,” creating a murid arcadia that he could observe at his leisure.”
noun
Etymology: From Arabic مُرِيد (murīd, literally “seeker”).
- A Sufi novice committed to enlightenment under a spiritual guide.
“And when Russian troops attacked breakaway Chechnya in the early 1990s, separatist fighters were often seen performing the stirring ritual the zikr, during which murids dance in a circle while crying hypnotic chants.”