"Biscia dal collare" or "natrice dal collare" may be Italian equivalents of "grass snake" (Natrix natrix).
The Italian words "biscia" and "natrice" are feminine nouns. Their singular definite article is "la" ("the"), and their singular indefinite article "una" ("a, one"). The word "dal" combines the preposition "da" with the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "of, from the." The masculine noun "collare" means "necklace." Its singular definite article is "il," and its singular indefinite article "un, uno."
The respective pronunciations are "BEE-shah dahl kohl-LAH-reh" and "nah-TREE-tcheh dahl kohl-LAH-reh."
"Biscione" is an Italian equivalent of "large grass snake" (Natrix natrix).The Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "bee-SHOH-neh."
The rattle snake lives in the grass.
It's only a grass snake
yes because the grass snake is bigger.
A False friend is just like a snake in the grass.
In the sentence the slimy, green snake slithered through the tall grass the nouns are snake and grass
I thought he was a friend, but he turned out to be a real snake in the grass.
"Large grass snake" is an English equivalent of "biscione" (Natrix natrix).The Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "bee-SHOH-neh."
The simple answer is you don't ! The Grass-snake, along with the European Adder and the Smooth Snake (which is actually a lizard) are ALL protected species.
depends on the type of snake it is and how long it lives
No the corn snake and the grass snake are completely different species ! Corn snakes are a native species of North America, while grass snakes are primarily found in Europe - including the British Isles.
no