The ordinary word for the mouse-like animal which flies at night is a vespertilio.
Batear= to batgolpear/volear con un bat = to bat
The Japanese word for bat is koumori (animal) and batto (baseball bat).Bat (animal):Koumori (こうもり/蝙蝠)Bat (baseball):Batto (バット)
Vac is Latin
If you're referring to a bat (animal) that is called a "chauve souris" which is feminine.
Myotis is Myotis in latin, it is a latin word. It is bat in english.ANS2:That means 'mouse ear' assembled from a couple Latin words.
"Tiger" is tigris (-is or -idis, m. or f.). "Bat" is vespertilio (-onis, m.).
The ordinary word for the mouse-like animal which flies at night is a vespertilio.
I know the 'acro' means high, but I don't know about the 'bat' part.
Incredibly, there are ten different Latin translations for the English word "club". One is "clava" if you mean a stick or a bat. Another is "sodalicium" if you are talking about a fellowship.
"He kept exposing to view," "One used to exhibit" and "She was showing" are English equivalents of the Latin word Ostendēbat. Context makes clear which translation suits. The pronunciation will be "os-TEN-dey-BAT" in Church and classical Latin.
"Icksnay" in Pig Latin is a way to say "sick." Pig Latin is a language game where the first consonant or consonant cluster of a word is moved to the end of the word, followed by "ay." So, "sick" becomes "icksay" in Pig Latin.
its at bat
Yep, it's a bat.
Bat can be a noun as in the flying creature or a bat you hit something with. Bat can also be a verb, as it to bat a ball. Using both forms, you can bat a ball with a bat.
a bat can kill another bat
Indiana bat , Gray bat , Little brown bat, Big brown bat, and the Eastern Pipistrelle bat