Answer #1
Serpens or vipera.
Answer #2
Anguis is the Latin equivalent of 'snake'. One Latin derivative is the adjective 'anguicomus', which means 'having snaky hair'. Another is the masculine gender noun 'anguiculus', which means 'little snake'. Still another is the feminine gender noun 'Anguilla', which means 'eel' or 'slippery customer'.
The Latin name for a coral snake is micrurus.
It can mean different things from a latin kings gang symbol or even represent the lion of judah taking on the snake which represents evil spirits. So what ever you take it as it what it means to you.
Yes, my kids and I watched a 2 foot snake eat a sizable frog, head first, in the Eel River of N.Calif. last summer. It took about 20 minutes and frog appeared to struggle and try to escape for about 15 minutes but was swallowed whole.
coral snake
once a snake always a snake
Latin for snake is serpens, anguis or vipera.
The Latin name for a coral snake is micrurus.
Serpens.
This is a very rare snake indeed. Known in Latin as Snakus Misspelledis
I think he got it from latin "Draco" in latin means snake or dragon.
Elaphe guttata guttataHerpetologists may also refer to the Corn Snake under the Latin name of Pantherophis Guttatus Guttatus, as there has recently been a discussion about the re-classification of the Corn Snake's Scientific name.
An Aesculapian snake is a European species of nonvenomous snake, Latin name Zamenis langissimus, associated with Aesculapius in Ancient Greek mythology.
Serpentomorph is not a known word in the Greek or Latin language.
The corn snake is also known as Elaphe guttata.
A Big Bend patchnose snake is a species of snake, Latin name Salvadora deserticola, from the Big Bend area of Texas.
The Latin masculine noun draco (a snake) has the nominative plural form dracones
Can is not a Latin word for a start. All Latin words for snake or serpent have no similarities to Can