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Ursovector

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Revision as of 09:51, 21 March 2026 by MorMythos (talk | contribs) (Usage notes)
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English

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Etymology

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

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.
  1. 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

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The neologism uses 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 maladroitly literalizes the “carrier” sense.

See also

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