different between gastropod vs auriform
gastropod
English
Etymology
French gastéropode, from gastro- +? -poda, New Latin, from Ancient Greek ?????? (gast?r, “stomach”) and ???? (poús, “foot”)
Pronunciation
- (US, Canada) IPA(key): /??æst???p?d/
Noun
gastropod (plural gastropods)
- Any member of a class of mollusks (Gastropoda) that includes snails and slugs; univalve mollusk.
- Hypernym: mollusc
Translations
References
Romanian
Noun
gastropod n (plural gastropode)
- Alternative form of gasteropod
Declension
gastropod From the web:
- what gastropods are dangerous to humans
- what gastropod has no shell
- what gastropod without shell
- what gastropods use for locomotion
- what gastropods have in common
- what's gastropod mean
- gastropod what does it do
- what do gastropods eat
auriform
English
Etymology
Latin auris (“ear”) +? -form
Adjective
auriform (comparative more auriform, superlative most auriform)
- Having the form of the human ear; ear-shaped.
- The gastropod mollusc abalone is auriform, and therefore also known as the ear shell.
Translations
References
- auriform in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
auriform From the web:
- what does uniform mean
- uniform shape
- what does uniform symbolize
- what does uniform represent
- what does it mean if something is uniform
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