noctule

Etymology
, a latinised scientific borrowing of the, inherited from , diminutive of , ultimately from , from. Per the OED, first attested in English in 1771.

Noun

 * 1) A bat, of the genus, that lives in tree hollows.

Translations

 * Albanian: noktulë
 * Armenian: իրիկնաչղջիկ
 * Azerbaijani: axşam yarasası
 * Basque: gau-saguzar
 * Belarusian: вячэ́рніца
 * Breton: nozigell
 * Bulgarian: вечерник
 * Catalan: nòctul
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 山蝠, 夜蝠
 * Mandarin:, 夜蝠
 * Dutch: vroegvlieger
 * Estonian: videvlane
 * Finnish: isolepakko
 * French:
 * Georgian: მეღამურა
 * German:
 * Hungarian: koraidenevér
 * Italian: nottola
 * Japanese: 山蝙蝠, ヤマコウモリ
 * Korean: 멧박쥐
 * Lithuanian: nakviša
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: storflaggermus
 * Nynorsk: storflaggermus
 * Persian: خفاش جنگلی
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: morcego-arborícola, morcego arborícola
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: но̏ћнӣк
 * Roman: nȍćnīk
 * Slovak: raniak
 * Slovene: mračnik
 * Spanish: nóctulo
 * Swedish: brunfladdermus
 * Thai: ค้างคาวกินแมลง
 * Ukrainian: вечі́рниця
 * Venetian: nòtoła
 * Western Panjabi: نائکٹالس

Etymology
Coined in 1760 by (quoted below) as a latinised borrowing of the.