Animals
- Domestic pig, Sus scrofa domestica or Sus domestica
- Wild Pig, or Eurasian Wild Boar, Sus scrofa, the species from which the domestic pig was bred
- Sus, a genus within the pig family, including Sus scrofa and closely related southeast Asian species
- Suinae, the pig subfamily, including Sus and other genera from Africa and southeast Asia
- Suidae, the pig family, including Suinae and other extinct Old World subfamilies
- Suina, a suborder of mammals including Suidae, and the Tayssuidae (peccaries or "New World pigs")
- Suidae, the pig family, including Suinae and other extinct Old World subfamilies
- Suinae, the pig subfamily, including Sus and other genera from Africa and southeast Asia
- Sus, a genus within the pig family, including Sus scrofa and closely related southeast Asian species
- Wild Pig, or Eurasian Wild Boar, Sus scrofa, the species from which the domestic pig was bred
- Hell pigs or terminator pigs, the Entelodonts, a family of extinct mammals
- Pork, the meat of a domestic pig
- Feral pig, domestic pig living in the wild
- Guinea pig, a domestic species of rodent that is popular as a pet
Read more about this topic: Pigs (film)
Famous quotes containing the word animals:
“What distinguished man from animals was the human capacity for symbolic thought, the capacity which was inseparable from the development of language in which words were not mere signals, but signifiers of something other than themselves. Yet the first symbols were animals. What distinguished men from animals was born of their relationship with them.”
—John Berger (b. 1926)
“Lions, wolves, and vultures dont live together in herds, droves or flocks. Of all animals of prey, man is the only sociable one. Every one of us preys upon his neighbour, and yet we herd together.”
—John Gay (16851732)
“The vast results obtained by Science are won by no mystical faculties, by no mental processes other than those which are practiced by every one of us, in the humblest and meanest affairs of life. A detective policeman discovers a burglar from the marks made by his shoe, by a mental process identical with that by which Cuvier restored the extinct animals of Montmartre from fragments of their bones.”
—Thomas Henry Huxley (182595)