different between mammal vs amphibians
mammal
English
Etymology
Modern Latin Mammalia, coined 1758 by Linnaeus for the class of mammals, from neuter plural of Late Latin mammalis (“of the breast”), from Latin mamma (“breast”), perhaps cognate with mamma (mother).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /?mæm?l/
- Hyphenation: mam?mal
Noun
mammal (plural mammals)
- An animal of the class Mammalia, characterized by being warm-blooded, having hair and producing milk with which to feed its young.
- (paleontology) A vertebrate with three bones in the inner ear and one in the jaw.
Hyponyms
- See also Thesaurus:mammal
Derived terms
Related terms
- mammarial
- mammary
Translations
mammal From the web:
- what mammals lay eggs
- what mammal lives the longest
- what mammal has no vocal cords
amphibians
English
Noun
amphibians
- plural of amphibian
amphibians From the web:
- what amphibians
- what amphibians eat
- what amphibians live in the desert
- what amphibians live in the rainforest
- what amphibians live in the sahara desert
- what amphibians go through metamorphosis
- what amphibians are endangered
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- mammal vs amphibians
- insects vs amphibians
- insect vs amphibians
- amphibians vs mammals
- reptiles vs amphibians
- aircraft vs hydrocopter
- catamaran vs hydrocopter
- amphibious vs hydrocopter
- california vs catalina
- island vs catalina
- aircraft vs catalina
- amphibious vs catalina
- land vs amphibiotic
- water vs amphibiotic
- insect vs amphibiotic
- amphibiotic vs amphibian
- equational vs equation
- davo vs david
- narcissuses vs narcissi
- daffadowndilly vs daffodowndilly