The common name is used for a variety of
carnivoran mammal species, mostly of the
family Viverridae. It is also used to refer to the
African palm civet and the
Malagasy civet. The African palm civet (
Nandinia binotata) is genetically distinct and belongs in its own monotypic family,
Nandiniidae. The
Malagasy civet (
Fossa fossana) belongs to a separate family
Eupleridae, with other carnivorans of Madagascar. The
Malagasy civet was to be placed in the
subfamily Hemigalinae with the
banded palm civets and then in its own subfamily, Fossinae, because of similarities with others in the group pointed out by
Gregory, but it is now classified as a member of the subfamily
Euplerinae, after
Pocock pointed out more similarities with that one. Civets are also called
toddy cats in English,
marapaṭṭi () in
Malayalam,
musang in
Malay, Filipino, and
Indonesian, and
urulǣvā () in
Sinhalese. There can be confusion among speakers of Malay because the indigenous word
musang has been mistakenly applied to
foxes by printed media instead of
rubah, which is the correct but lesser-known term. A minority of writers use
civet to refer only to
Civettictis,
Viverra and
Viverricula civets. However, in more common usage in English, the name also covers the civets of the viverrid genera
Chrotogale,
Cynogale,
Diplogale,
Hemigalus,
Arctogalidia,
Macrogalidia,
Paguma and
Paradoxurus.
South Asia In
Sri Lanka, the
Asian palm civet, Small indian civet and Golden palm civet species is known as "uguduwa" by the Sinhala-speaking community. The terms
uguduwa and
kalawedda are used interchangeably by the Sri Lankan community to refer to the same animal. However, the term kalawedda is mostly used to refer to another species in the civet family, the
Golden palm civet. Sri Lanka also has an endemic civet species called
golden palm civet. Recently this species was split into three separate endemic species as
Paradoxurus montanus,
P. aureus, and
P. stenocephalus. In Bangladesh and
Bengali-speaking areas of India, civets are known as "khatash" () for the smaller species and "bagdash" () for the larger ones and is now extremely rare in Bangladesh (in the
Khulna area of the country, the animal is also known as "shairel"). In Assamese this animal is known as "zohamola" () which literally means "to have
zoha aromatic feces". In Maharashtra
Marathi-speaking areas of India, civets are known as "Udmanjar" (). In
Kerala, the
Malayalam speaking areas of
India, the small Indian civet (
Viverricula indica) is called "veruk" (വെരുക്). In adjoining coastal regions of Karnataka it is called 'beru'/ಬೆರು in kannada as also Tulu. 'Veruku' (வெருகு) in Tamil meant 'cat', particularly during the Sangam period ( 100 BCE to 400 CE). ==Physical characteristics==