Squid belong to the class Cephalopoda, which comes for the Greek words for "head" and "foot".
The Latin meaning of "phylum" is "race" or "tribe." The Latin meaning of "class" is "division" or "rank."
The squid belongs to the class of Cephalopods, Chephal meaning head and pod meaning foot.
Squid are in the Class Cephelapoda, Phylum Mollusca, Kingdom Animalia.
The word squid is spelled in Greek as kalamari. IN Latin the word squid is spelled as squid and in Italian it is spelled as calamaro.
Cephalopoda
The phylum for a squid is Cephalopoda, derived from the Greek words "kephalē," meaning "head," and "pous," meaning "foot." This reflects the anatomical structure of cephalopods, where the head is prominent and the arms or tentacles are directly attached to it. Thus, the name emphasizes the unique body plan of these marine animals.
it is class cephalopoda:)
Cephalopoda
Phlyum: Molluska (mollusks) Class: Cepholopoda (cepholopods)
Octopuses and squid are related and are grouped into a group called the cephalopods. This cephalopod group is a class in the Phylum Mollusca called Class Cephalopoda. The name Cephalopoda has the etymology meaning 'head foot'. Classes and phyla fall into the subject of Linnaean classification, also called taxonomy.
All Squids belong to...Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: MolluscaClass: CephalopodaThe Order, Family, Genus, and Species may vary between squid species.
Names for squid in modern scientific Latin tend to involve the word teuthis, which is originally Greek. This word isn't attested in ancient Latin. There was a mythical many-armed creature called the arbor ("tree") because its arms were fancied to resemble the branches of a tree, which may or may not be a reference to a sort of squid.