Meleagris gallopa
The North American turkey rejoices in the Latin name "Meleagris gallopavo"
Gallipavo is the Latin Word for Turkey. Classic Latin did not have a word for turkey - the turkey is from the New World, and that WA snot known to Europeans until 1000 years sfter the end of the Roman Empire.
The scientific name for the wild turkey is the Meleagris gallopavo. The common name is the domesticated turkey. The turkey has different names in all different origins.
People who lived in the region were known as Turks or Turuks. In medieval Latin the area's name became Turchia, which was eventually anglicised to "Turkey" even though it's totally unrelated to the game bird of the same name.
A Turkey oak.
Lira is a given name for a female. It is of Latin origin but is also used in India. The name Lira means harp.
No, Armenian is a separate branch in the Indo-European family of languages. It is not very closely related to any other language, but it has been strongly influenced by Iranian languages, which means that it "feels" more closely related to Persian than it really is.
The proper name of a turkey farmer is farmer, or turkey farmer.
urkey-tay arf-bay
The scientific name for the turkey genus is meleagris.
Hermes' Latin name was mercury.
the latin name for crocodile is 'crocodilius'!! =P