Both are semi-aquatic. Both lay eggs. Both can be carnivorous.
duckbill is platypus so platypus + snail= turtle
There is no such thing as a "Eucalyptus platypus".
Ornithorhynchus anatinusThe original name was Platypus anatinus, from Greek and Latin words meaning "flat-footed, duck-like". After realising that the name "platypus" had already be given to a group of beetles, the scientist involved assigned the platypus the scientific name of Ornithorhynchus anatinus, the first word of which means "bird-like snout".
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun turtle is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female animal. There are no gender nouns for a male or female turtle.
No because it lays eggs. The only mammal that lays eggs is the platypus. It is a reptile.
i believe the common adaptions of the common snapping turtle are anonymous.
The most common turtle name is Fred or Freddie
erm.... a turtle?
platypus
bog turtle
The platypus is not endangered. The Australian Government lists the platypus as "common but vulnerable". The International Union for Conservation of Nature lists the platypus as "least concern". Platypuses are now strictly protected by law
A box turtle would be very common if your in the south and north east