标题: Corporate Steeds of Wells Fargo and Anheiser-Busch [打印本页] 作者: choi 时间: 11-13-2013 12:30 标题: Corporate Steeds of Wells Fargo and Anheiser-Busch Daniel Roberts, Battle of the Corporate Steeds. Fortune, Nov 18, 2013. http://features.blogs.fortune.cn ... weiser-wells-fargo/
Wiktionary provides no etymology, but the definition is correct. No other English dictionaries, as far as I can tell, define sabino.
(iv) In fact, white color in horse--be it the entire horse or part of it--so far has been attributed to mutations inactivating the kit gene.
* Haase B et al, Allelic Heterogeneity at the Equine KIT Locus in Dominant White (W) Horses. PLoS Genet, 3: e195 (2007) (full text). http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2065884/
* For the kit gene, see CD117 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD117
(on the surface of certain types of hematopoietic (blood) progenitors in the bone marrow; a receptor of tyrosine-protein kinase, whose ligand is stem cell factor (also known as "steel factor" or "c-kit ligand")
(b) "1858 Year the company [Wells Fargo] started using horses"
(i) history of Wells Fargo http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Wells_Fargo
(Vermont native Henry Wells and New Yorker William G.Fargo watched the California [gold rush] boom economy with keen interest; In 1852, they organized Wells, Fargo & Company)
(ii) The English surname Wells is from "Old English well(a) ‘spring’, ‘stream.’"
(iii) The Hungarian surnames Fargo/Vargo/ Varga are from "Hungarian varga ‘cobbler’, ‘shoemaker.’"