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   Examples:
   Examples:
   * The wildlife biologist became an ''ursovector'', tagging and transporting data about bear populations across the region.   
   * The wildlife biologist became an ''ursovector'', tagging and transporting data about bear populations across the region.   
    → “carrier” of bear-related information
   * In the meme economy, that account is a pure ''ursovector'', spreading bear content to every corner of the internet.   
   * In the meme economy, that account is a pure ''ursovector'', spreading bear content to every corner of the internet.   
    → “carrier” of bear-themed media
   * The shipping crate functioned as an ''ursovector'', safely conveying the sedated animal to the sanctuary.   
   * The shipping crate functioned as an ''ursovector'', safely conveying the sedated animal to the sanctuary.   
    → “carrier” of an actual bear, but framed less literally or personally
   * Tourists with bear spray and tall tales quickly become ''ursovectors'' of wilderness anxiety.
   * Tourists with bear spray and tall tales quickly become ''ursovectors'' of wilderness anxiety.
    → “carrier” of bear-associated ideas or fear


===Usage notes===
===Usage notes===

Revision as of 09:46, 21 March 2026

English

Etymology

From ursus (“bear”) + vector (“carrier, bearer”).

Noun

ursovector (plural ursovectors)

1. A person or thing that carries a bear; one who bears a bear.

  Examples:
  * The circus handler, an experienced ursovector, guided the trained bear into the transport cage.  
  * Eddie Hall, an aura‑farming ursovector, hoisted a bear over his shoulders and trudged onward.

2. By extension, an agent or carrier associated with bears.

  Examples:
  * The wildlife biologist became an ursovector, tagging and transporting data about bear populations across the region.  
  * In the meme economy, that account is a pure ursovector, spreading bear content to every corner of the internet.  
  * The shipping crate functioned as an ursovector, safely conveying the sedated animal to the sanctuary.  
  * Tourists with bear spray and tall tales quickly become ursovectors of wilderness anxiety.

Usage notes

The formation reflects the Latin noun vector (“carrier”), which in English commonly appears in technical contexts (e.g., mathematics, physics) to denote a quantity with magnitude and direction. The term ursovector humorously literalizes the “carrier” sense.

See also

  • bear
  • vector