Definition of Palmipedes. Meaning of Palmipedes. Synonyms of Palmipedes

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Palmipedes. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Palmipedes and, of course, Palmipedes synonyms and on the right images related to the word Palmipedes.

Definition of Palmipedes

Palmipedes
Palmipedes Pal*mip"e*des, n. pl. [NL.] (Zo["o]l.) Same as Natatores.

Meaning of Palmipedes from wikipedia

- The Palmipède (from French, meaning 'web-footed') was an early steamboat created in 1774 by French nobleman, engineer, and inventor Marquis Claude de...
- Statistic". Statista. Retrieved 2 May 2019. "ITAVI: Note de conjoncture Palmipèdes gras - Mars 2021". www.itavi.****o.fr. Retrieved 3 July 2023. "Foie Gras...
- Melbourne: C****ell & Co. Liste des races et variétés de Gallinacés et Palmipèdes domestiques et diamètres des bagues en mm (in French). Fédération française...
- Culture and Communication, Centre for Applied Ethics. "Note de conjoncture Palmipèdes gras" [Economic outlook for fatty waterfowl]. ITAVI (in French). March...
- Archived 10 December 2021. Liste des races et variétés de Gallinacés et Palmipèdes domestiques et diamètres des bagues en mm (in French). Fédération française...
- Latin pathus meaning "****ually receptive". In Cuba, by extension, other palmipedes's names are used to denote ****ness: "oca" (greylag goose), "cisne" (swan)...
- propulsion. In 1776, Jouffroy d'Abbans developed a 13-meter steamboat, the Palmipède, in which the engine moved oars equipped with rotating blades. The boat...
- and his colleagues as an improvement of an earlier attempt, the 1776 Palmipède. At its first demonstration on 15 July 1783, Pyroscaphe travelled upstream...
- 1774 – Jacob Christian Schäffer divides the birds into two families, Palmipedes (web-footed) and the much larger family Nudipedes (not web-footed) in...
- drove paddles on each side. One of the first functioning steamships, Palmipède, which was also the first paddle steamer, was built in France in 1774...