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单词 snake
释义

snake


Snake 1

S0504600 (snāk)n. pl. Snake or Snakes See Shoshone.

Snake 2

S0504600 (snāk)n. See Hydra.

snake

S0504600 (snāk)n.1. Any of numerous scaly, legless, sometimes venomous squamate reptiles of the suborder Serpentes (or Ophidia), having a long, tapering, cylindrical body and flexible jaws.2. A treacherous person. Also called snake in the grass.3. A long, highly flexible metal wire or coil used for cleaning drains. Also called plumber's snake.v. snaked, snak·ing, snakes v.tr.1. To drag or pull lengthwise, especially to drag with a rope or chain.2. To pull with quick jerks.3. To move in a sinuous or gliding manner: tried to snake the rope along the ledge.v.intr. To move with a sinuous motion: The river snakes through the valley.
[Middle English, from Old English snaca.]

snake

(sneɪk) n1. (Animals) any reptile of the suborder Ophidia (or Serpentes), typically having a scaly cylindrical limbless body, fused eyelids, and a jaw modified for swallowing large prey: includes venomous forms such as cobras and rattlesnakes, large nonvenomous constrictors (boas and pythons), and small harmless types such as the grass snake. 2. Also called: snake in the grass a deceitful or treacherous person3. anything resembling a snake in appearance or action4. (Economics) (in the European Union) a former system of managing a group of currencies by allowing the exchange rate of each of them only to fluctuate within narrow limits5. (Tools) a tool in the form of a long flexible wire for unblocking drainsvb6. (intr) to glide or move like a snake7. (Forestry) (tr) US to haul (a heavy object, esp a log) by fastening a rope around one end of it8. (tr) (often foll by out) US to pull jerkily9. (tr) to move in or follow (a sinuous course)[Old English snaca; related to Old Norse snākr snake, Old High German snahhan to crawl, Norwegian snōk snail] ˈsnakeˌlike adj

snake

(sneɪk)

n., v. snaked, snak•ing. n. 1. any limbless, scaly, elongate reptile of the suborder Serpentes, comprising venomous and nonvenomous species. 2. a treacherous person; an insidious enemy. 3. (in plumbing) a device for dislodging obstructions in curved pipes, having a head fed into the pipe at the end of a flexible metal band. v.i. 4. to move, twist, or wind in the manner of a snake: The road snakes among the mountains. v.t. 5. to wind or make (one's course, way, etc.) in the manner of a snake. 6. to haul, esp. by a chain or rope, as a log. [before 1000; Middle English (n.); Old English snaca, c. Old Norse snākr]

snake

(snāk) Any of numerous meat-eating reptiles having a long narrow body with no legs, often just one lung, and a forked tongue. The jaws of a snake come apart and the body can expand to swallow prey that is much thicker than the snake itself. Some snakes have venom glands and sharp fangs that can give a poisonous bite.

snake

  • squamous, squamulose - A fish or snake can be squamous or squamulose—covered with minute scales.
  • adder - A snake, it was first "a nadder," which was misanalyzed to "an adder."
  • snark - A blend of snake and shark by Lewis Carroll, it is a synonym for "snore" or "snort."
  • tang - The tongue of a snake.

Snake

 a term applied to things or a formation resembling a snake—Wilkes.Examples: a black snake of men winding across the plain, 1891; snakes of ribbon, 1894.
Thesaurus
Noun1.snake - limbless scaly elongate reptilesnake - limbless scaly elongate reptile; some are venomousophidian, serpentdiapsid, diapsid reptile - reptile having a pair of openings in the skull behind each eyeOphidia, Serpentes, suborder Ophidia, suborder Serpentes - snakescolubrid, colubrid snake - mostly harmless temperate-to-tropical terrestrial or arboreal or aquatic snakesblind snake, worm snake - wormlike burrowing snake of warm regions having vestigial eyesconstrictor - any of various large nonvenomous snakes that kill their prey by crushing it in its coilselapid, elapid snake - any of numerous venomous fanged snakes of warmer parts of both hemispheressea snake - any of numerous venomous aquatic viviparous snakes having a fin-like tail; of warm littoral seas; feed on fish which they immobilize with quick-acting venomviper - venomous Old World snakes characterized by hollow venom-conducting fangs in the upper jaw
2.snake - a deceitful or treacherous personsnake in the grassbad person - a person who does harm to others
3.snake - a tributary of the Columbia River that rises in Wyoming and flows westwardSnake - a tributary of the Columbia River that rises in Wyoming and flows westward; discovered in 1805 by the Lewis and Clark ExpeditionSnake RiverGem State, ID, Idaho - a state in the Rocky MountainsBeaver State, OR, Oregon - a state in northwestern United States on the PacificEvergreen State, WA, Washington - a state in northwestern United States on the PacificEquality State, WY, Wyoming - a state in the western United States; mountainous in the west and north with the Great Plains in the eastTwin Falls, Twin - a waterfall in the Snake River in southern Idaho
4.Snake - a long faint constellation in the southern hemisphere near the equator stretching between Virgo and CancerHydra
5.snake - something long, thin, and flexible that resembles a snakeobject, physical object - a tangible and visible entity; an entity that can cast a shadow; "it was full of rackets, balls and other objects"closet auger - a snake used to unblock toiletsauger, plumber's snake - a long flexible steel coil for dislodging stoppages in curved pipestrap-and-drain auger - a plumber's snake for clearing a trap and drain
Verb1.snake - move smoothly and sinuously, like a snakeglide - move smoothly and effortlessly
2.snake - form a snake-like pattern; "The river snakes through the valley"curve, wind, twist - extend in curves and turns; "The road winds around the lake"; "the path twisted through the forest"
3.snake - move along a winding path; "The army snaked through the jungle"meander, thread, wind, wander, weave - to move or cause to move in a sinuous, spiral, or circular course; "the river winds through the hills"; "the path meanders through the vineyards"; "sometimes, the gout wanders through the entire body"

snake

noun1. serpent He was caught with his pet snake in his pocket.verb1. wind, twist, curve, turn, bend, ramble, meander, deviate, zigzag The road snaked through the forested mountains.Related words
adjectives serpentine, anguine, ophidian, colubrine
like ophidiomania
fear ophidiophobia
see reptiles

snake

verb1. To move sinuously:sinuate, slither, undulate.2. To move or proceed on a repeatedly curving course:coil, corkscrew, curl, entwine, meander, spiral, twine, twist, weave, wind, wreathe.3. To move along in a crouching or prone position:crawl, creep, slide, worm.4. To move silently and furtively:creep, glide, lurk, mouse, prowl, pussyfoot, skulk, slide, slink, slip, sneak, steal.Slang: gumshoe.
Translations
蛇似蛇般地爬行

snake

(sneik) noun any of a group of legless reptiles with long bodies that move along on the ground with a twisting movement, many of which have a poisonous bite. He was bitten by a snake and nearly died. verb to move like a snake. He snaked his way through the narrow tunnel. 似蛇般地爬行 似蛇般地爬行ˈsnake-bite noun the wound resulting from the bite of a snake. What is the best treatment for (a) snake-bite? (蛇的)咬傷 (蛇的)咬伤 ˈsnake-charmer noun a person who can handle snakes and make them perform rhythmical movements. 玩蛇者 弄蛇者

snake

蛇zhCN

snake


snake

1. in. to scheme; to plot and plan. (Prisons.) He spent a lot of time snaking about that job. 2. tv. to steal something. Where did you snake that bike?
See:
  • (as) mad as a snake
  • a snake in (one's) bosom
  • a snake in the grass
  • banana oil
  • go at like a boy killing snakes
  • If it was a snake it woulda bit you
  • if it was a snake, it would've bit you
  • like fighting snakes
  • mad as a snake
  • nourish a snake in (one's) bosom
  • nurse a snake in (one's) bosom
  • nurture a snake in (one's) bosom
  • one-eyed pants snake
  • one-eyed snake
  • one-eyed trouser snake
  • see snakes
  • seeing pink elephants
  • seeing snakes
  • snake
  • snake along
  • snake eyes
  • snake in the grass
  • snake oil
  • snake oil salesman
  • snakebite medicine
  • snakes and ladders
  • trouser snake
  • viper in one's bosom
  • viper in one's bosom, (nourish) a

snake


Snake,

river, 1,038 mi (1,670 km) long, NW United States, the chief tributary of the Columbia; once called the Lewis River. The Snake rises in NW Wyoming, in Yellowstone National Park, flows through Jackson Lake in Grand Teton National Park, then S and W into Idaho and northwest to its junction with the Henrys Fork River. The combined stream runs southwest, then northwest, crossing southern Idaho through the Snake River plain; there are several notable falls. The Snake makes a bend into Oregon and turns north to form the Idaho-Oregon and Idaho-Washington lines (receiving several tributaries, including the Boise and Salmon rivers), then turns at Lewiston, Idaho (at the mouth of the Clearwater River), and flows generally west to join the Columbia River near Pasco, Wash. Hell's Canyon is the greatest of the Snake's many gorges and one of the deepest in the world. Extending c.125 mi (200 km) N along the Oregon-Idaho line, it reaches a maximum depth of c.7,900 ft (2,410 m).

The Snake was explored by the Lewis and Clark expedition (1803–6) and was of major importance in U.S. expansion into the Pacific Northwest. The river is a major source of electricity, having numerous hydroelectric power plants. The upper and middle courses of the Snake and its tributaries are much used for irrigation by private projects (one of the most notable being at Twin Falls) and by projects of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, including the Minidoka project, the Boise project, the Palisades project, and the Owyhee project. Four navigation and hydroelectric power projects along the lower Snake provide slack water navigation from the mouth of the Snake 140 mi (225 km) upstream to Lewiston, Idaho. The projects are linked with the navigation system on the Columbia River. The late 1990s brought efforts to restore portions of the river by removing gravel and establishing new islands.


snake,

common name for an elongated, limbless reptile of the order Squamata, which also includes the xlizardslizard,
a reptile of the order Squamata, which also includes the snake. Lizards form the suborder Sauria, and there are over 3,000 lizard species distributed throughout the world (except for the polar regions), with the greatest number found in warm climates.
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. Most snakes live on the ground, but some are burrowers, arboreal, or aquatic; one group is exclusively marine. In temperate climates they hibernate. They are generally solitary in their habits, although they may congregate in places offering food or shelter, and large numbers may hibernate together. Snakes range in length from about 4 in. (10 cm) to over 30 ft (9 m). Most are protectively colored.

Characteristics

Anatomy

Snakes constitute the suborder Serpentes (or Ophidia). In most snakes limbs are entirely lacking, but a few have traces of hind limbs. The skin, which is covered with horny scales, is shed, usually several times a year. The extremely long, narrow body is associated with distinctive internal features. The number of vertebrae is much larger than in most vertebrates, paired internal organs are arranged linearly rather than side by side, and only one lung is developed, except in members of the boa family, which have two lungs. The jaws of snakes are loosely jointed and extremely flexible. The pointed, backward-curved teeth are fused to the supporting bones of the head. There are no ears or movable eyelids; the eyes are covered by transparent "spectacles," or ocular scales. Snakes have good vision. They do not hear airborne sound waves, but can perceive low-frequency vibrations (100–700 Hz) transmitted from the ground to the bones of the skull. A chemosensory organ opens into the roof of the mouth; it receives stimuli from the forked tongue that constantly tastes the surroundings as the animal moves along. Snakes have no larynx or vocal chords, but are capable of producing a hissing sound.

Locomotion and Limblessness

A snake moves by means of muscular contraction, which can produce several types of locomotion, the commonest types being undulation and straight-line movement. Straight-line movement is aided by the ventral plates, elongated scales on the abdomen that overlap with their open ends pointing toward the tail. These plates can be moved forward by means of muscles attached to the ribs.

It is believed that snakes are descended from lizards, but how and why they evolved toward limblessness is uncertain. Some paleontologists have held that limblessness was an evolutionary advantage in the dense vegetation that formed the early environment of snakes, or that it developed to facilitate burrowing habits, but others believe that the earliest snakes evolved in an aquatic environment and are descended from marine reptiles related to mosasaurs. The fossil evidence for a land or marine origin is inconclusive; the earliest known snakelike reptiles date to some 167 million years ago.

Predation

Small snakes feed on insects and larger ones on proportionately larger animals. Their teeth are designed for catching and holding prey, but not for chewing. The construction of the jaws, the ribs, and the expandable skin enable them to swallow very large prey whole. Some snakes capture animals by pinning them to the ground; some—the constrictors—crush them by wrapping their bodies around them and squeezing; still others—the venomous snakes—inject poison into their victims. The poison, or venomvenom
or zootoxin,
any of a variety of poisonous substances produced by animals. In poisonous snakes, venom is secreted in two poison glands, one on each side of the upper jaw, and enters the fang by a duct.
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, is produced by modified salivary glands from which it passes through either a groove or a hollow bore in the fangs, the enlarged, specialized teeth found in venomous snakes. A snake may bite a person when threatened or alarmed; if the snake is venomous the bite can sometimes prove fatal (see snakebitesnakebite,
wound inflicted by the teeth of a snake. The bite of a nonvenomous snake is rarely serious. Venomous snakes have fangs, hollow teeth through which poison is injected into a victim.
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). Only by familiarity with the appearance of particular species, or by examination of the fangs, can the venomous snakes be distinguished from the harmless ones.

Reproduction

Fertilization is internal in snakes; as in lizards, the males have paired copulatory organs, either of which may be used in mating. Females of some species can store sperm for several years to insure future fertilization. In most species the female lays eggs; in some the eggs are incubated and hatched within the mother's body; in a few there is true viviparity, or live birth, with the young nourished by means of a placenta rather than an egg. Some egg-laying snakes brood the eggs, but there is no parental care of the young.

Types of Snakes

The approximately 2,700 snake species, of which about four fifths are nonvenomous, are distributed throughout the temperate and tropical zones of the world (except in New Zealand, Ireland, and some isolated oceanic islands) and are found in greatest profusion in the tropics. About two thirds of all snake species belong to the family Colubridae; most of these are nonvenomous. Among the harmless colubrid snakes of North America are the garter snakesgarter snake,
harmless snake of the genus Thamnophis, abundant from Canada to Central America. There are many common species; members of most species are about 2 ft (60 cm) long. Most garter snakes are striped or banded lengthwise, and some are spotted between the stripes.
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 (including the ribbon snake), the water snakes, the green, or grass, snakes, the black snakesblack snake,
name for several snakes, not all closely related, that are black in color. In the United States the name is applied chiefly to the black racer and to the black rat snake (Elaphe obsoleta), both partly arboreal in their habits.
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, the racersracer,
name for several related swift, slender snakes, especially those of the genus Coluber. All of the racers are nonpoisonous, nonconstricting, day-active snakes. The black racer, C.
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, the king snakesking snake,
name for a number of species of the genus Lampropeltis, nonvenomous, egg-laying, constricting snakes of North America which show much variation in color and markings.
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 (including the milk snake), and the bull, hognose, and rat snakes. The family Boidae (boasboa
, name for live-bearing constrictor snakes of the family Boidae, found mostly in the Americas. This family, which also comprises the egg-laying pythons of the Old World, includes the largest of all snakes, as well as many smaller ones.
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 and pythonspython
, name for nonvenomous constrictor snakes of the boa family, found in the tropical regions of Africa, Asia, Australia, and the S Pacific islands. Pythons climb and swim expertly. They kill the birds and mammals on which they feed by squeezing them in their coils.
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) includes the world's largest snakes, the South American anaconda and the Asian reticulated python, as well as the smaller boa constrictor and the tree and sand boas.

Most poisonous New World snakes belong to the pit viperpit viper,
poisonous snake of the family Crotalidae, primarily a New World family. Like the Old World true vipers (family Viperidae), pit vipers have long, hollow, erectile fangs that are folded back against the roof of the mouth except when the snake is striking.
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 family; these include the copperheadcopperhead,
poisonous snake, Ancistrodon contortrix, of the E United States. Like its close relative, the water moccasin, the copperhead is a member of the pit viper family and detects its warm-blooded prey by means of a heat-sensitive organ behind the nostril.
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, water moccasinwater moccasin
or cottonmouth,
highly venomous snake, Ancistrodon piscivorus, of the swamps and bayous of the S United States. Like the closely related copperhead, it is a pit viper and has a heat-sensitive organ for detecting warm-blooded prey.
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, rattlesnakerattlesnake,
poisonous New World snake of the pit viper family, distinguished by a rattle at the end of the tail. The head is triangular, being widened at the base. The rattle is a series of dried, hollow segments of skin, which, when shaken, make a whirring sound.
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, fer-de-lance, and bushmasterbushmaster,
large venomous snake, Lachesis muta, of Central America and N South America. It is a member of the pit viper family, which also includes the rattlesnake. The largest New World snake, it reaches a length of 8 to 12 ft (2.5–5.5 m).
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. Venomous Old World snakes are the true vipersviper,
any of a large number of heavy-bodied, poisonous snakes of the family Viperidae, characterized by erectile, hypodermic fangs. The fangs are folded back against the roof of the mouth except when the snake strikes. Vipers are distributed throughout Eurasia and Africa.
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, including the adder and the aspasp,
popular name for several species of viper, one of which, the European asp (Vipera aspis), is native to S Europe. It is also a name for the Egyptian cobra (Naja haja).
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, and members of the cobra family, including the mambamamba,
name for African snakes of the genus Dendroaspis, in the cobra family. Widely distributed throughout Africa except in the deserts, mambas have extremely toxic venom.
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 of Africa and the krait of Asia. The poisonous coral snakescoral snake,
name for poisonous New World snakes of the same family as the Old World cobras. About 30 species inhabit Mexico, Central America, and N South America; two are found in the United States.
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 of the New World also belong to this family. The venomous sea snakes inhabit tropical oceans.

Importance

Snakes are of major importance as pest controllers because of their extensive predation on destructive mammals such as rats and mice. Some, like the sea snakessea snake,
name for any of the venomous marine snakes of the family Hydrophidae, found in tropical waters of the Indian and Pacific oceans. The sea snake's body is flattened laterally and its oarlike tail is used as a scull.
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 and pythons, are highly regarded as food in Asia but, although most are probably edible, snakes are not widely used for meat. The skin is often used for belts, bags, and shoes. Venom is removed from snakes for use in treating certain diseases and to make antivenin for snakebites.

See also snake worshipsnake worship.
The snake has been variously adored as a regenerative power, as a god of evil, as a god of good, as Christ (by the Gnostics), as a phallic deity, as a solar deity, and as a god of death.
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.

Classification

Snakes are classified in the phylum ChordataChordata
, phylum of animals having a notochord, or dorsal stiffening rod, as the chief internal skeletal support at some stage of their development. Most chordates are vertebrates (animals with backbones), but the phylum also includes some small marine invertebrate animals.
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, subphylum Vertebrata, class Reptilia, order Squamata, suborder Serpentes.

Bibliography

See A. H. and A. A. Wright, A Handbook of Snakes of the United States and Canada (2 vol., 1957); K. L. Williams and V. Wallach, Snakes of the World (2 vol., 1990).

Snake

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

The Snake is one of the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac. It refers to one of the 12 earthly branches that are used in Chinese astrology, together with the 10 heavenly stems. Such a branch designates one day every 12 days: the days are named according to a sexagesimal (60) cycle, made of 10 series of 12 branches.

Attractive, smart, hateful of vulgarity, and sometimes narcissistic, the Snake has a disconcerting manner. Reserved and passive, he is a solitary person, but he fascinates. Elusive, he prefers to go around obstacles. Remarkably able to keep his composure, he is materialistic, very perceptive (sometimes visionary), and he makes an excellent organizer. He is also a generous, emotional, even fragile person who can prove to be very devoted, in spite of his apparent reserve. He often seems lazy until he finds his real goal in life.

—Michele Delemme

Snake

 

a river in the USA, a left tributary of the Columbia River. The Snake River measures approximately 1,670 km long and drains an area of 282,300 sq km. Originating in the Rocky Mountains, in Yellowstone National Park, it skirts the eastern edge of the Columbia Plateau, flowing in places through canyons that have a total length of approximately 400 km and measure as much as 800 m deep. It forms waterfalls, including Shoshone Falls (65 m high). The river is fed by snow and rain. High water lasts from April to June. The mean flow rate at Clarkston, near the mouth, is 1,390 cu m per sec.

The Snake River is navigable for small ships as far as the city of Lewiston. Hydroelectric power plants and reservoirs are located at various sites on the river, including American Falls. The river is used for irrigation. The cities of Idaho Falls and Twin Falls are located on the Snake River.

What does it mean when you dream about a snake?

Serpents are ancient symbols, often associated with goddesses of fertility. Because they live in the ground, serpents may represent the healing, nurturing earth; they can also symbolize knowledge. In some cultures in southern Asia, serpents symbolize primordial spiritual power. Alternatively, they may be emblems of the mysterious dangers of the underworld. The Christian tradition incorporated the latter meaning into its mythology, making snakes an embodiment of evil, particularly the evil of temptation (e.g., the snake in the Garden of Eden). For this reason, in Western cultures especially, snakes are images for people who are sneaky and deceptive. The cliche, “they behave like a snake in the grass,” captures this derogatory reference.

snake

[snāk] (metallurgy) A twisted and bent hod rod formed before subsequent rolling operations. A flexible mandrel used to prevent collapse of a shaped piece during bending operations. (vertebrate zoology) Any of about 3000 species of reptiles which belong to the 13 living families composing the suborder Serpentes in the order Squamata.

snake

1. A long tempered-steel, resilient wire, usually having a rectangular cross section, used by electricians in pulling wires through conduit or through an inaccessible space; the snake is threaded through first, followed by the wire. 2. A tool used by plumbers to unblock a pipe or sanitary fitting; usually a highly flexible metal wire, given a rotary motion by a crank at one end.

snake

1. any reptile of the suborder Ophidia (or Serpentes), typically having a scaly cylindrical limbless body, fused eyelids, and a jaw modified for swallowing large prey: includes venomous forms such as cobras and rattlesnakes, large nonvenomous constrictors (boas and pythons), and small harmless types such as the grass snake 2. (in the European Union) a former system of managing a group of currencies by allowing the exchange rate of each of them only to fluctuate within narrow limits 3. a tool in the form of a long flexible wire for unblocking drains

Snake

(dreams)In some cultures, snakes are highly regarded and symbolize the ability to transcend into higher levels of consciousness or into areas of knowledge that exist outside perceived time and space. In the pre-Christian days, snakes were considered symbols of fertility, healing, and nurturing (the healing serpent representing a god). Post Adam and Eve, snakes are often considered symbols of temptation and evil, anger, and envy. Snakes emerging out of the ground may represent your unconscious or repressed materials coming to your conscious mind. Freud thought that the snake was a phallic symbol. It is amazing how many people have snake dreams! Most snake dreams seem to be disturbing and they leave the dreamer feeling anxious and afraid. There are no simple interpretations to the snake dreams. Each dreamer must consider his own situation and all of the details of the dream. Sometimes snakes may be phallic symbols, and other times they represent negativity in our lives that hampers our progress and constantly threatens us. In the long run the snake may be a positive symbol; it may represent difficulties that lead us to the center of personality and result in feelings of completeness.

snake


snake

 [snāk] any of many limbless reptiles; numerous species have venomous bites. See also snakebite.coral snake any of various venomous vipers" >pit vipers of the genera Micrurus and Micruroides; called also harlequin snake.harlequin snake coral snake.

snake

(snāk), An elongated, limbless, scaly reptile of the suborder Ophidia.

snake

(snāk)n. Any of numerous scaly, legless, sometimes venomous squamate reptiles of the suborder Serpentes (or Ophidia), having a long, tapering, cylindrical body and flexible jaws.

snake

Trivial name for limbless members of suborder Ophidia, of medical interest, primarily because snakes have poisonous venom containing hemotoxins and/or neurotoxins; venomous North American snakes belong to either the viper family Crotilidae–rattlesnake, copperhead, water moccasin, or to Elapidae, coral snakes, related to cobras and kraits–India, Southeast Asia, and mambas, brown, black, tiger snakes of Australia; others–eg, constrictors encircle prey and asphyxiate; pet snakes are associated with infections: Aeromonas hydrophila, Edwardsiella tarda, E coli, mesocestoidiasis, Morganella morganii, Mycobacterium ulcerans, Ophionyssus natricis infestation, pentastosomiasis, Proteus vulgaris, Providencia spp, Q fever, salmonellosis, sparganosis. See Sea snake Vox populi A derogatory term for a ne'er-do-well–eg, lawyer, ex-spouse, etc.

Snake


Snake

Arrangement established in 1972, that ties European currencies to each other within specified limits.

SNAKE


AcronymDefinition
SNAKESpecial Needs Assessment for Katrina Evacuees
SNAKESmart Network Automated Kickstart Environment (software)
SNAKESupraleitendes Nanoskop für Angewandte Kernphysikalische Experimente (German: Superconducting Nanoprobe for Applied Nuclear Physics Experiments)
SNAKE[not an acronym] nickname for AH1 Cobra gunship used in Vietnam

snake


  • all
  • noun
  • verb

Synonyms for snake

noun serpent

Synonyms

  • serpent

verb wind

Synonyms

  • wind
  • twist
  • curve
  • turn
  • bend
  • ramble
  • meander
  • deviate
  • zigzag

Synonyms for snake

verb to move sinuously

Synonyms

  • sinuate
  • slither
  • undulate

verb to move or proceed on a repeatedly curving course

Synonyms

  • coil
  • corkscrew
  • curl
  • entwine
  • meander
  • spiral
  • twine
  • twist
  • weave
  • wind
  • wreathe

verb to move along in a crouching or prone position

Synonyms

  • crawl
  • creep
  • slide
  • worm

verb to move silently and furtively

Synonyms

  • creep
  • glide
  • lurk
  • mouse
  • prowl
  • pussyfoot
  • skulk
  • slide
  • slink
  • slip
  • sneak
  • steal
  • gumshoe

Synonyms for snake

noun limbless scaly elongate reptile

Synonyms

  • ophidian
  • serpent

Related Words

  • diapsid
  • diapsid reptile
  • Ophidia
  • Serpentes
  • suborder Ophidia
  • suborder Serpentes
  • colubrid
  • colubrid snake
  • blind snake
  • worm snake
  • constrictor
  • elapid
  • elapid snake
  • sea snake
  • viper

noun a deceitful or treacherous person

Synonyms

  • snake in the grass

Related Words

  • bad person

noun a tributary of the Columbia River that rises in Wyoming and flows westward

Synonyms

  • Snake River

Related Words

  • Gem State
  • ID
  • Idaho
  • Beaver State
  • OR
  • Oregon
  • Evergreen State
  • WA
  • Washington
  • Equality State
  • WY
  • Wyoming
  • Twin Falls
  • Twin

noun a long faint constellation in the southern hemisphere near the equator stretching between Virgo and Cancer

Synonyms

  • Hydra

noun something long, thin, and flexible that resembles a snake

Related Words

  • object
  • physical object
  • closet auger
  • auger
  • plumber's snake
  • trap-and-drain auger

verb move smoothly and sinuously, like a snake

Related Words

  • glide

verb form a snake-like pattern

Related Words

  • curve
  • wind
  • twist

verb move along a winding path

Related Words

  • meander
  • thread
  • wind
  • wander
  • weave
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英语词典包含2567994条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

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更新时间:2024/12/23 18:13:45