The name Zebra in English dated to the early 1600's and possibly derives from a Portuguese word of the same spelling. But the origin in uncertain. There could be a Latin connection to the word 'equiferus' meaning wild horse.
The word zebra has two syllables.
A zebra is an African horse-like animal with a white body striped with regular black bars. The word "zebra" is sometimes applied to other black and white striped animals, such as a zebra fish or zebra wolf.
Yes, zebra is a noun. Side note: that is a common noun, a certain species of zebra is a proper noun
The lion ate the zebra carcasses.
Wambui Micore is a kikuyu word which means a Zebra.
I saw a zebra at the zoo. The zebra comes from Africa. A zebra looks a lot like a horse with stripes. You can ride a horse but you can't ride a zebra.
The name "zebra" comes from the old Portuguese word zevra which means "wild ass".
The word "zebra" comes from the Latin word "zebra," which is derived from the Old Portuguese word "zevra" and the Spanish word "cebra." These terms ultimately trace back to the Old Spanish "zebro," which originated from the Latin "equiferus," meaning "wild horse."
In the sentence you have typed, the word "words" comes last alphabetically.
Nothing
zebra = zebra (sometimes spelled sebra)
Waboi mucore is the Kikuyu word for the English word zebra.
a zebra = un zèbre
there is no compound word in English ending with zebra. I looked in the dictionary.
The word zebra has two syllables.
zebra
there is no compound word in English ending with zebra. I looked in the dictionary.