Animalia is Latin for the plural noun, animals. It is used as the name of one of the six kingdoms of scientific classification.
their knigdom is animalia they are quite obviously in the animal kingdom.
"Animalia" is a Latin word meaning "animals." It is not a language itself, but rather a term used in taxonomy to represent the kingdom of living organisms that includes multicellular organisms capable of movement.
The 'Animalia' kingdom.
Yes. It is the Class Insecta, the Phylum Anthropoda, and the Kingdom Animalia. Anything in the Kingdom Animalia is an animal.
no but it is in the field of entertainment and arts.
You say "animal" in latin if you want to say animal. animal = animal... "Animalia" is the plural of animal. Animalia means animals in latin.
animal
Animalia is the plural of the Latin word animal. It comes from anima, which originally meant "breath".
The Golden Eagle is classified in Animalia, Latin for "animal"
the kingdom is animal, or latin animalia, but i think the phylum is chordata , but not sure about that one
animal Its actually Animalia
Kingdom: AnimaliaKingdom: AnimaliaKingdom: AnimaliaKingdom: AnimaliaKingdom: AnimaliaKingdom: Animalia
animalia
The animal is Kingdom Animalia.
In science, living things are classified into kingdoms. These kingdoms are bacteria, protist, fugni, plant, and animal. Tortoises are in the animal kingdom. The next division beyond kingdoms is phylums.
animalia (or animal) six kingdoms: archaebacteria, eubacteria, protists, plantae, animalia, fungi
Animalia