- Serpiginous,
first known to be used in the 15th century, is a term from
Latin serpere (“to creep”),
usually referring to a creeping,
snakelike or
slowly progressive...
- serein, serotine, serotinous, serotiny,
soiree serp- crawl,
creep Latin serpere,
serptus serpent serr- saw, saw-toothed
Latin serra,
serrare biserrate...
- serein, serotine, serotinous, serotiny,
soiree serp- crawl,
creep Latin serpere,
serptus serpent serr- saw, saw-toothed
Latin serra,
serrare biserrate...
-
Sanskrit Sarpa (Jawl aqra), serpent; sarpin,
reptile (from the root srip,
serpere).
These "burning serpents"(YLT)
infested the
great and
terrible place of...
-
Arrangement of
British Plants. The name is
derived from the
Latin verb
serpěre "to creep".
Synonyms include Johann Heinrich Friedrich Link's 1809 Xylophagous...