lizard = lagarto
El largarto is the Spanish word for lizard. The lizard is a reptile found within the warmer climates of North America.
alliogator means devil lizard coming from th spanish
I read somewhere that it comes from Spanish "el lagarto", meaning "the lizard". (Note that the modern Spanish word for "alligator" is "caiman", with an acute accent on the second "a" that I don't know how to type in here!)
In Europe it derives from a 17th Century Spanish word 'el lagarto' meaning a lizard. This comes from Latin 'lacerta'
The word lizard has two syllables.
lizard = androngo
Yes, the word 'lizard' is a noun, a word for a thing.
To say the word lizard in the Japanese language you say the word tokage.
Alligator is el lagarto (a word for lizard) which is where English gets the word from. Crocodile is cocodrilo.(The South American name for the relatively smaller crocodilian is caiman.)
"Reina lagarto"
Direct quote from Wikipedia... "The name alligator is an anglicized form of el lagarto, the Spanish term for "lizard", which early Spanish explorers and settlers in Florida called the alligator."