Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Nov 8, 2010 · Guinea pigs are often used as a metaphor for any subject of scientific experimentation (e.g. "human guinea pigs"), and this idea persists even though guinea pigs are no longer commonly used as modern experimental animals, as rats and mice (which breed quicker) have replaced them.

  3. What's the meaning of the phrase 'Guinea-pig'? A person or animal who is used as the subject of an experiment. What's the origin of the phrase 'Guinea-pig'? It isn’t at all clear why these cute family pets came to be given their name. They are cavies, not pigs, and they don’t originate from Guinea.

  4. Is Calling Someone a Guinea Pig Slang? It’s not so much slang as it is a popular idiom. Guinea pig literally refers to the cute rodent, but using it to describe someone as a test subject is an established and widely understood idiomatic expression.

    • Author
  5. Definithing. In the mid-1990s, when Bob Helms began publishing Guinea Pig Zero, his zine for research subjects, Helms and his fellow operatives used phrases such as “lab rat,” “guinea pig,” “brain slut,” and “medical meat puppet” in order to highlight their relative lack of power. Hastings Center Report. Share.

  6. Dec 22, 2009 · The guinea pig (or “cavy”), a small rodent of the genus Cavia, originated in South America but is now found in cages – and on laps – throughout the world. So it isn’t from Guinea (which is the name of both a country and a region in western Africa), and it isn’t a pig.

  7. The animal commonly known as a Guinea pig is neither from Guinea, a region in West Africa, nor is it a pig. It is in fact a rodent from South America. The ‘pig’ part is easy to understand because the breed was called cavia porcellus, the latter being Latin for ‘little pig’.

  8. noun [ C ] us / ˈɡɪn·i ˌpɪɡ /. Add to word list. a small, furry animal with rounded ears, short legs, and no tail, often kept as a pet and for use in scientific experiments. fig. A guinea pig is also a person used in a test, esp. one to discover how effective a new drug or process is:

  1. People also search for