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MERINO , the See also: Spanish name for a breed of See also: sheep, and hence applied to a woollen fabric
.
The Spanish word is generally taken to be an adaptation to the sheep of the name of an official (merino) who inspected sheep pastures
.
This word is from the See also: medieval Latin majorinus, a steward, See also: head official of a See also: village, &c., from major, greater
.
The merino is a See also: white
See also: short-wool sheep, the male having See also: spiral horns, the ewes being generally hornless
.
It is bred chiefly for its wool, because, though an excellent grazer and very adaptable, it matures slowly and its mutton is not of the best quality
.
The wool is close and wavy in See also: staple, reaching 4 in. in length, and surpasses that of all other sheep in fineness; it is so abundant that little but the muzzle, which should by of an orange tint, and hoofs, are See also: left uncovered
.
The best wool is produced on See also: light sandy soils
.
The merino is little known in See also: Great Britain, the See also: climatic moisture of which does not favour the growth of the finest wools, but it predominates in all regions where sheep are bred for their wool rather than- their mutton, as in the western See also: United States, Cape Colony, See also: Australia, New Zealand and See also: Argentina
.
In See also: Australasia, especially in New Zealand, the merino has been crossed with Lincoln, Leicesters, Shropshires and other breeds, with the result of improving the quality
of the mutton while sacrificing to some extent that of the wool
.
The merino sheep appears to have originated in See also: Africa, whence it was brought by the Moors to See also: Spain and thence spread over See also: Europe, especially to See also: Austria-Hungary, See also: Germany and See also: France
.
The best-known breeds are the Rambouillet, a large merino named after the village near See also: Paris, to which it was imported towards the end of the 18th century, and the Negretti, which stands in closer relationship to the old Spanish stock and has shorter wool but a more wrinkled fleece
.
Importations to See also: America began about the beginning of the 19th century
.
The so-called See also: American merino, the Delaine, the See also: Vermont and the Rambouillet, are well-known breeds in the United States
.
The See also: term " merino " is widely employed in the textile See also: industries with very varied meanings
.
Originally it was restricted to denote the wool of the merino sheep reared in Spain, but owing to the superiority of the wools grown on merino sheep and shipped from Botany See also: Bay, the name as applied to wool was replaced by the term " botany." In the dress-goods and knitting trades the term " merino " still implies an article made from the very best soft wool
.
The term " cashmere," however, is frequently confused with it, although cashmere goods should be made from true cashmere and not, as is often the See also: case, from the finest botany wool
.
In the See also: hosiery and remanufactured materials trades the term " merino " is applied to fibre-mixtures of See also: cotton and wool in contradistinction to " all wool " goods
.
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