1906, Praagh, L. V,The Transvaal and its mines : the encyclopedic history of the Transvaal[2]:
and the littleAsse Fox (Canis chama).
1910,Encyclopædia Britannica 1911 ed. Vol. 10[3], page769:
South of the Zambezi the group reappears in the shape of theasse-fox or fennec, (V. cama), a dark-coloured species, with a black tip to the long, bushy tail and reddish-brown ears.
1973, West, Geoffrey P. (Geoffrey Philip),Rabies in animals & man[4], New York, Arco,→ISBN,→OCLC:
Foxes involved include the long-earedAsse Fox or Cape Fox (Vulpes chania) and the bat-eared fox
Eino Koponen, Klaas Ruppel, Kirsti Aapala, editors (2002–2008),Álgu database: Etymological database of the Saami languages[5], Helsinki: Research Institute for the Languages of Finland
BI. daye ſũtyme. oþ᷑ beo niht. gedereþ in oure herte. alle seeke and ſoꝛe. þat wo. and pouert. þt poꝛe þoleþ. þe pyne þat pͥſons habbeþ. þer aliggen wıþ Iren heuye I.feteret. Nomeliche of þe cristene. þat beoþ in heþeneſſe. Sũme in prison. sũme in as muche wo. as Oxe is. oþerAſſe.
At some point in the day or night hold in your heart all the sick and grieving, the suffering and deprivation the poor endure, the torments that prisons contain, where [people] lie fettered with heavy iron, and especially the Christians who are in Heathendom: some in prison, and some in as much misery as an ox or adonkey.
Eino Koponen, Klaas Ruppel, Kirsti Aapala, editors (2002–2008),Álgu database: Etymological database of the Saami languages[8], Helsinki: Research Institute for the Languages of Finland