‖ tenebrio
(tɪˈnɛbrɪəʊ)
Also 7 tenebrion.
[L. tenebrio one who lurks in the dark, f. tenebræ darkness; F. ténébrion (Rabelais, 16th c.).]
† 1. One who lurks in the dark; a night-prowler; also, a night-spirit, a nocturnal visitant. Obs. rare.
| 1656 Blount Glossogr., Tenebrion, one that will not be seen by day, a lurker, a night-thief; also a night-spirit, a hobgoblin. a 1693 Urquhart's Rabelais iii. xxiv, The approach of the Suns radiant Beams expelleth Goblins, Bugbears,.. Night-walking Spirits, and Tenebrions. a 1734 North Exam. i. i. §7 (1740), The very rankest of [the Hackney Libellers], which..came forth, like Nocturnal Tenebrios, from the dark and dirty Recesses of the Party. |
2. Entom. The typical genus of the family Tenebrionidæ of heteromerous beetles, which live in dark places on decaying matter and excrement (hence known as stinking beetles). It includes the two meal-worms, Tenebrio molitor and T. obscurus, and numerous species that live in decayed trees.
| 1753 Chambers Cycl. Supp. App., Tenebrio... Mouffet has called it the blatta fœtida. 1811 Pinkerton Voy. X. 190 The women of Arabia and Turkey make use of another tenebrio, which is found among the filth of gardens. 1833 A. Crichton Hist. Arabia II. ix. 462. |