different between herbivorous vs diplodocus
herbivorous
English
Etymology
From New Latin herbivorus, from Latin herba (“grass”) and -vorus, from vor? (“I eat”).
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /h????b?v???s/
Adjective
herbivorous (comparative more herbivorous, superlative most herbivorous)
- Feeding chiefly on plants.
Derived terms
Related terms
- herbivore
Translations
See also
- omnivorous
herbivorous From the web:
- what herbivores
- what herbivores eat
- what herbivores live in the rainforest
- what herbivores live in the desert
- what herbivores eat grass
- what herbivores live in the tundra
- what herbivores live in the ocean
- what herbivores live in the forest
diplodocus
English
Wikispecies
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ??????? (diplóos, “double”) and ????? (dokós, “beam”).
Noun
diplodocus (plural diplodocuses)
- Any of several herbivorous sauropod dinosaurs, of the genus Diplodocus, known as fossils from the late Jurassic in North America.
Translations
Spanish
Noun
diplodocus m (plural diplodocus)
- diplodocus
diplodocus From the web:
- what diplodocus eat
- what do diplodocus eat
- what does diplodocus eat
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- herbivorous vs diplodocus
- spinosaurus vs tyrannosaurusrex
- tyrannosaurusrex vs lizard
- tyrannosaurusrex vs cat
- silurian vs homerian
- silurian vs acanthodian
- silures vs silurian
- epoch vs silurian
- pridoli vs silurian
- wenlock vs silurian
- antiarchi vs antiarch
- extinct vs antiarch
- terms vs ganocephala
- terms vs neozoic
- cenozoic vs neozoic
- mesozoic vs neozoic
- era vs neozoic
- precambrian vs mesozoic
- hadean vs precambrian
- cryptozoic vs precambrian