mus, muris
The Latin word for "mouse" is "mus". (Pronounced "Moose".)
The Latin word for 'rat' is Mus. It's the same noun as for 'mouse'. The Latin word for 'mouse'- or 'rat-trap' is 'muscipula'.
Little mouse
It originates from the Latin word 'Mus', which is also the genus under which mice are categorised. The Latin term for the common house mouse is Mus musculus.
The Latin word for 'mouse' is Mus. The diminutive 'musculus' means 'little mouse'. In the ancient, classical Latin of the ancient Romans, the noun 'mus' doesn't refer only to a mouse. It also refers to the sable, the marten, and the ermine.
musculus comes from the word mus which means "mouse" and the ending ulus is a diminutive so musculus literally means "little mouse". whoever named muscles thought they looked like little mice running around under the skin when flexed.
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.
The word muscle comes from the Latin word musculus which means little mouse (mus = mouse.)
The Latin root 'mus' in English means "mouse." It is commonly found in words related to rodents and small mammals, such as "muscle" (from Latin musculus, meaning "little mouse") or "museum" (from Latin museum, meaning "seat of the Muses").
The ordinary word for the mouse-like animal which flies at night is a vespertilio.
The suffix of muscle is "-le," which is derived from the Latin word "musculus" meaning "little mouse."
-Musophobia, derived from the Latin word "mus" for mouse.-Suriphobia, derived from the French word "souris", also mean mouse.-Murophobia, coined from the taxonomy word for mouse.