scolopendra

See also: Scolopendra

English

Etymology

From Latin scolopendra, from Ancient Greek σκολόπενδρα (skolópendra).

Noun

scolopendra (plural scolopendras)

  1. (obsolete) A mythical sea-creature, reputed to be able to disgorge its bowels to dislodge any fishing-hook.
  2. A centipede of the genus Scolopendra.
    • 1845 November, The Eclectic Magazine, volume 6, page 352:
      This led the conversation to the insects of the Crimea and Ukraine, of which I had made a considerable collection, and the Emperor inquired of me if there were scorpions, scolopendras and tarantulas in the Crimea.

Italian

Etymology

From Latin scolopendra, from Ancient Greek σκολόπενδρα (skolópendra).

Noun

scolopendra f (plural scolopendre)

  1. scolopendra, a kind of centipede

Anagrams

Latin

Etymology

From Ancient Greek σκολόπενδρα (skolópendra).

Pronunciation

Noun

scolopendra f (genitive scolopendrae); first declension

  1. A kind of centipede.
  2. A kind of sea fish.

Declension

First-declension noun.

singular plural
nominative scolopendra scolopendrae
genitive scolopendrae scolopendrārum
dative scolopendrae scolopendrīs
accusative scolopendram scolopendrās
ablative scolopendrā scolopendrīs
vocative scolopendra scolopendrae

Descendants

  • French: scolopendre
  • Italian: scolopendra
  • Romanian: scolopendră
  • Spanish: escolopendra
  • Translingual: Scolopendra

References