Перевод: со всех языков на английский

с английского на все языки

giant snakes

  • 1 cerdo hormiguero

    m.
    aardvark.
    * * *
    (n.) = aardvark
    Ex. Crocodiles, giant snakes, aardvarks, and anteaters on the other hand release significant amounts of methane.
    * * *
    (n.) = aardvark

    Ex: Crocodiles, giant snakes, aardvarks, and anteaters on the other hand release significant amounts of methane.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cerdo hormiguero

  • 2 oso hormiguero

    m.
    anteater, great anteater, ant bear, ant-eater.
    * * *
    anteater
    * * *
    anteater, ant bear (AmE)
    * * *
    (n.) = anteater [ant-eater]
    Ex. Crocodiles, giant snakes, aardvarks, and anteaters on the other hand release significant amounts of methane.
    * * *
    anteater, ant bear (AmE)
    * * *
    (n.) = anteater [ant-eater]

    Ex: Crocodiles, giant snakes, aardvarks, and anteaters on the other hand release significant amounts of methane.

    * * *
    anteater

    Spanish-English dictionary > oso hormiguero

  • 3 ложноногие змеи

    Biology: boids (Boidae), giant snakes (Boidae)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > ложноногие змеи

  • 4 удавообразные змеи

    Biology: boids (Boidae), giant snakes (Boidae)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > удавообразные змеи

  • 5 ложноногие змеи

    Русско-английский биологический словарь > ложноногие змеи

  • 6 удавообразные змеи

    Русско-английский биологический словарь > удавообразные змеи

  • 7 galápago

    m.
    1 sea turtle, terrapin.
    2 small ingot, ingot.
    3 English saddle, light saddle.
    * * *
    1 (animal) turtle
    2 (lingote) ingot
    3 (silla de montar) light saddle
    * * *
    SM
    1) (=tortuga) freshwater turtle
    2) (=molde) tile mould, tile mold (EEUU)
    3) (Téc) ingot, pig
    4) (=montura) light saddle; LAm (=montura de lado) sidesaddle
    5) [de bicicleta] racing saddle
    * * *
    1) (Zool) ( tortuga - gigante) giant turtle; (- europea) terrapin
    2) ( en ciclismo) racing saddle
    * * *
    = terrapin, sea turtle.
    Ex. The second part covers the conditions and treatment of particular species including chinchillas, ferrets, terrapins, and raccoons.
    Ex. Groups included are the bivalves, gastropods, cephalopods, sea turtles, sea birds and sea snakes.
    * * *
    1) (Zool) ( tortuga - gigante) giant turtle; (- europea) terrapin
    2) ( en ciclismo) racing saddle
    * * *
    = terrapin, sea turtle.

    Ex: The second part covers the conditions and treatment of particular species including chinchillas, ferrets, terrapins, and raccoons.

    Ex: Groups included are the bivalves, gastropods, cephalopods, sea turtles, sea birds and sea snakes.

    * * *
    A ( Zool) freshwater/sea turtle ( AmE), turtle ( BrE)
    B ( Equ) English saddle; (en ciclismo) racing saddle
    * * *

    galápago sustantivo masculino (Zool) ( tortugagigante) giant turtle;
    (— europea) terrapin
    galápago m Zool turtle
    * * *
    1. [tortuga] terrapin
    2. Hond, Perú, Ven [silla de montar] sidesaddle
    3. Col [sillín] saddle
    * * *
    m ZO turtle
    * * *
    : aquatic turtle

    Spanish-English dictionary > galápago

  • 8 HAMR

    (-s, -ir), m.
    1) skin, slough; hleypa hömum, to cast the slough (of snakes);
    2) shape, form; skipta hömum, to change one’s shape.
    * * *
    m., pl. hamir, dat. hami, Vsp. 36, but ham, Höfuðl. (where ham, gram, and fram form a rhyme), as also Haustl. 2, Hkr. i. 228, all of them poems of the 10th century; [A. S. hama, homa; Hel. hamo; O. H. G. hemedi, whence mod. Germ. hemd; Dan. ham; akin to hamr is Ital. camisa, Fr. chemise, with a final s answering to hams below]:—a skin, esp. the skin of birds flayed off with feathers and wings; álptar-hamr, a swan’s skin; fugls-hamr, a bird’s skin; arnar-hamr, an eagle’s skin; gásar-hamr, a goose’s skin, etc.; hams, q. v., of snakes: ham bera svanir hvítfjaðraðan (of a swan’s skin), Fas. i. 471 (in a verse); hleypa hömum (of snakes), to cast the slough, Konr. 34; hlátra hamr, poët. laughter’s cover, the breast, Höfuðl. 19.
    II. shape, esp. in a mythol. sense, connected with the phrase, skipta hömum, to change the shape, described in Yngl. S. ch. 7, Völs. S. ch. 7, 8, and passim; cp. also the deriv. ein-hamr, ham-farir, ham-ramr, ham-stola, hamingja, hamask, etc.,—an old and widespread superstition found in the popular lore and fairy tales of almost every country;—Óðinn skipti hömum, lá þá búkrinn sem sofinn eðr dauðr, en hann var þá fugl eða dýr, fiskr eða ormr, ok fór á einni svipstund á fjarlæg lönd, Yngl. S. l. c., Fas. i. 128 (Völs. S. l. c.); it is described in Völs. S. ch. 8,—þeir hafa orðit fyrir úsköpum, því at úlfa-hamir ( wolf-coats) héngu yfir þeim; it tíunda hvert dægr máttu þeir komask ór hömunum, etc.; þeir fundu konur þrjár ok spunnu lín, þar vóru hjá þeim álptar-hamir þeirra, Sæm. 88 (prose to Vkv.); fjölkyngis-kona var þar komin í álptar-ham, Fas. i. 373, cp. Helr. 6; víxla hömum, to change skins, assume one another’s shape, Skv. 1. 42; Úlf-hamr, Wolf-skin, the nickname of a mythol. king, Hervar. S., prob. from being hamramr; manns-hamr, the human skin, Str. 31; hugða ek at væri hamr Atla, methought it was the form or ghost of Atli, Am. 19; jötunn í arnar-ham, a giant in an eagle’s skin, Vþm. 37, Edda; í gemlis-ham, id., Haustl.; fjaðr-hamr, Þkv.; í faxa-ham, in a horse’s skin, Hkr. i. (in a verse); í trölls-hami, in an ogre’s skin, Vsp. 36; vals-hamr, a falcon’s skin, Edda (of the goddess Freyja): it remains in mod. usage in metaph. phrases, að vera í góðum, íllum, vondum, ham, to be in a good, bad, dismal frame of mind or mood; vera í sínum rétta ham, to be in one’s own good frame of mind; færast í annan ham, to enter into another frame of mind: in western Icel. an angry, ill-tempered woman is called hamr, hún er mesti hamr (= vargr): hams-lauss, adj. distempered, furious, esp. used in Icel. of a person out of his mind from restlessness or passion, the metaphor from one who cannot recover his own skin, and roves restlessly in search of it, vide Ísl. Þjóðs. passim.
    COMPDS: hamdökkr, hamfagr, hamljótr, hamvátr, Hamðir.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > HAMR

  • 9 Gigantes

    Gĭgās, antis, m., = Gigas, a giant; usually in plur.: Gĭgantes, um, m., = Gigantes, the fabled sons of Earth and Tartarus, giants with snakes for legs, who stormed the heavens, but were smitten by Jupiter with lightning and buried under Ætna.—Sing., Ov. P. 2, 10, 24; acc. giganta, Stat. Th. 5, 569; Mart. 9, 51, 6:

    gigantem,

    Vulg. Sirach, 47, 4.— Plur., Ov. F. 5, 35; id. M. 1, 152; 5, 319; Hor. C. 2, 19, 22; Cic. N. D. 2, 28, 70:

    gigantum more bellare,

    id. de Sen. 2, 5; Hyg. Fab. praef. (cf. also Verg. G. 1, 278 sq.); Prop. 3, 5, 39 (dub.;

    Müll. nocentum,

    id. 4, 4, 39).—
    II.
    Deriv. Gĭgan-tēus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to the giants:

    bellum,

    Ov. Tr. 2, 71:

    sanguis,

    Verg. Cul. 27:

    triumphus,

    Hor. C. 3, 1, 7:

    tropaea,

    Ov. F. 5, 555: ora litoris, i. e. at Cumœ, in Campania (where, according to the myth, the giants dwelt in the Phlegræan Fields, and fought with the gods), Prop. 1, 20, 9 (cf. Sil. 12, 143 sq.):

    genus,

    Vulg. Num. 13, 34.—
    2.
    Transf., gigantic:

    corpus,

    Sil. 5, 436.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > Gigantes

  • 10 Giganteus

    Gĭgās, antis, m., = Gigas, a giant; usually in plur.: Gĭgantes, um, m., = Gigantes, the fabled sons of Earth and Tartarus, giants with snakes for legs, who stormed the heavens, but were smitten by Jupiter with lightning and buried under Ætna.—Sing., Ov. P. 2, 10, 24; acc. giganta, Stat. Th. 5, 569; Mart. 9, 51, 6:

    gigantem,

    Vulg. Sirach, 47, 4.— Plur., Ov. F. 5, 35; id. M. 1, 152; 5, 319; Hor. C. 2, 19, 22; Cic. N. D. 2, 28, 70:

    gigantum more bellare,

    id. de Sen. 2, 5; Hyg. Fab. praef. (cf. also Verg. G. 1, 278 sq.); Prop. 3, 5, 39 (dub.;

    Müll. nocentum,

    id. 4, 4, 39).—
    II.
    Deriv. Gĭgan-tēus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to the giants:

    bellum,

    Ov. Tr. 2, 71:

    sanguis,

    Verg. Cul. 27:

    triumphus,

    Hor. C. 3, 1, 7:

    tropaea,

    Ov. F. 5, 555: ora litoris, i. e. at Cumœ, in Campania (where, according to the myth, the giants dwelt in the Phlegræan Fields, and fought with the gods), Prop. 1, 20, 9 (cf. Sil. 12, 143 sq.):

    genus,

    Vulg. Num. 13, 34.—
    2.
    Transf., gigantic:

    corpus,

    Sil. 5, 436.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > Giganteus

  • 11 Gigas

    Gĭgās, antis, m., = Gigas, a giant; usually in plur.: Gĭgantes, um, m., = Gigantes, the fabled sons of Earth and Tartarus, giants with snakes for legs, who stormed the heavens, but were smitten by Jupiter with lightning and buried under Ætna.—Sing., Ov. P. 2, 10, 24; acc. giganta, Stat. Th. 5, 569; Mart. 9, 51, 6:

    gigantem,

    Vulg. Sirach, 47, 4.— Plur., Ov. F. 5, 35; id. M. 1, 152; 5, 319; Hor. C. 2, 19, 22; Cic. N. D. 2, 28, 70:

    gigantum more bellare,

    id. de Sen. 2, 5; Hyg. Fab. praef. (cf. also Verg. G. 1, 278 sq.); Prop. 3, 5, 39 (dub.;

    Müll. nocentum,

    id. 4, 4, 39).—
    II.
    Deriv. Gĭgan-tēus, a, um, adj., of or belonging to the giants:

    bellum,

    Ov. Tr. 2, 71:

    sanguis,

    Verg. Cul. 27:

    triumphus,

    Hor. C. 3, 1, 7:

    tropaea,

    Ov. F. 5, 555: ora litoris, i. e. at Cumœ, in Campania (where, according to the myth, the giants dwelt in the Phlegræan Fields, and fought with the gods), Prop. 1, 20, 9 (cf. Sil. 12, 143 sq.):

    genus,

    Vulg. Num. 13, 34.—
    2.
    Transf., gigantic:

    corpus,

    Sil. 5, 436.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > Gigas

См. также в других словарях:

  • Giant anaconda — Reports of giant anaconda date back as far as the discovery of South America when sightings of snakes upwards of 11 meters (33.5 ft) began to circulate amongst colonists and the topic has been a subject of debate ever since among cryptozoologists …   Wikipedia

  • Giant Girdled Lizard — Conservation status Vulnerable ( …   Wikipedia

  • Snakes on a Train — Infobox Film name = Snakes on a Train amg id = 1:354034 imdb id = 0843873 producer = director = The Mallachi Brothers writer = Eric Frosberg starring = Julia Ruiz Giovanni Bejarano Al Galvex | music = cinematography = editing = distributor = The… …   Wikipedia

  • Giant desert hairy scorpion — Taxobox name = Giant desert hairy scorpion image width = 250px regnum = Animalia phylum = Arthropoda subphylum = Chelicerata classis = Arachnida ordo = Scorpiones familia = Caraboctonidae genus = Hadrurus species = H. arizonensis binomial =… …   Wikipedia

  • Idaho Giant Salamander — Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1) Scientific classification …   Wikipedia

  • André the Giant — Infobox Wrestler name=André the Giant names=André Roussimoff Butcher Roussimoff Giant Roussimoff Monster Roussimoff Eiffel Tower Monster Eiffel Tower Jean Ferré Géant Ferré André the Giant Giant Machine height= height|ft=7|in=6 weight=… …   Wikipedia

  • Mega Shark Versus Giant Octopus — DVD cover Directed by Jack Perez (as Ace Hannah) Produced by …   Wikipedia

  • Asian giant hornet — Scale bar is 5 millimeters Scientific classification Kingdom: Animalia …   Wikipedia

  • List of snakes of South Asia — The following is a list of snakes of South Asia, primarily covering the region covered by mainland India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Bhutan, parts of Myanmar and the Andaman and Nicobar Island chains. All families are covered except… …   Wikipedia

  • List of snakes by common name — This is a list of extant snakes, given by their common names. Note that the snakes are grouped by name, and in some cases the grouping may have no scientific basis. A *Adder **Berg adder **Common adder **Deaf adder **Death adder **Desert death… …   Wikipedia

  • Mega Python vs. Gatoroid — Distributed by The Asylum Syfy …   Wikipedia

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»