There's actually no such language as "Creole". The word creole refers to a type of language that results from the combination of two completely different parent languages. There are more than 100 different creolized languages in the world, so you would have to specify which one you're talking about.
If you're not sure, here is a list of the most commonly spoken Creoles in the world(one of them is even an official language):
a snake = un serpent
Serpens (genitive: serpentis, f).
Serpentes
The Latin word for snake, which is how dragons were described, is draco, plural draconem, in the nominative case.
Cobra comes from the Portuguese word cobra (de capello) =snake (with a hood), from Latin colubra =snake
ovo serpens
Serpentomorph is not a known word in the Greek or Latin language.
The Latin masculine noun draco (a snake) has the nominative plural form dracones
It is the origin of serpent; it means serpent or snake.
Can is not a Latin word for a start. All Latin words for snake or serpent have no similarities to Can
Latin for snake is serpens, anguis or vipera.
The Latin name for a coral snake is micrurus.
Serpens.
Latin: Serpens, Anguis Laotian: ? Check your spelling and re-post. There is no language "Latian".
This is a very rare snake indeed. Known in Latin as Snakus Misspelledis