Caro aprugna[1] vel aprina[2] e varietate non domesticata porcorum provenit. Distinguere necesse est inter animalia silvatica venatione capta eaque quae in paradisis ab hominibus pascuntur.
"ā̆prīnus, a, um, adj. aper, of or belonging to the wild boar: viscus, Lucil. ap. Charis. p. 63 P.: pulmo, Plin. 28, 16, 62, § 222: vesica, id. 28, 15, 60, § 215: fel, id. 28, 16, 62, § 221" (L&S); "aprinus [CL] , of a boar, of brawn. b like that of a boar. dentur galline, leporine post et aprine / carnes D. Bec. 2566; c1327 vobis mittimus ‥ quatuor scuta ~a J. Mason Ep. 29 p. 210. b hippotamus ‥ ~is dentibus Neckam NR II 30" (DMLBS): Logeion
Fontes antiquiores
1607: Iosephus Quercetanus, Diaeteticon polyhistoricon (1607) (p. 311 apud Google Books) ("aprugna")
"Wild Boar" in Alan Davidson, The Oxford Companion to Food (Oxoniae: Oxford University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-19-211579-0) p. 848
Claudine Fabre-Vassas, La Bête singulière. Lutetiae: Gallimard, 1994. Versio Anglica: The Singular Beast. Novi Eboraci: Columbia University Press, 1997