Search references for COMPTUS STENURUS. Phrases containing COMPTUS STENURUS
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Species of lizard
Comptus stenurus, the Hispaniolan keeled galliwasp or Cope's galliwasp, is a species of lizard of the Diploglossidae family endemic to the Caribbean island
Comptus_stenurus
Genus of reptiles
different islands: Comptus badius (Cope, 1868) – Navassa galliwasp Comptus maculatus (Garman, 1888) – Cayman galliwasp Comptus stenurus (Cope, 1862) – Hispaniolan
Comptus
galliwasp (Celestus crusculus) Navassa galliwasp (Comptus badius) Cope's galliwasp (Comptus stenurus) Cuban galliwasp (Diploglossus delasagra) Banded galliwasp
List of least concern reptiles
List_of_least_concern_reptiles
German zoologist, theologian and writer (1829–1915)
Franz Steindachner in 1892. Celestus weinlandi Cope 1868, currently Comptus stenurus weinlandi. Ueber den Beutelfrosch, 1854 – About the marsupial frog
David_Friedrich_Weinland
russatus (Salvin & Godman, 1881) Narrow-tailed emerald, Chlorostilbon stenurus (Cabanis & Heine, 1860) Short-tailed emerald, Chlorostilbon poortmani (Bourcier
List_of_birds_of_Colombia
emerald, Chlorostilbon russatus (E-SA) Narrow-tailed emerald, Chlorostilbon stenurus (E-SA) Green-tailed emerald, Chlorostilbon alice (E-VE) Short-tailed emerald
List of birds of South America
List_of_birds_of_South_America
COMPTUS STENURUS
COMPTUS STENURUS
Male
Egyptian
, a lord of Coptos.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Compton.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English serm(o)un ‘sermon’, a metonymic occupational name for a preacher, or perhaps a nickname for a long-winded and pompous person.Dutch : variant of Simon, with epenthetic -r-.
Boy/Male
Greek
River of lamenting.
Surname or Lastname
Spanish and Portuguese
Spanish and Portuguese : nickname from the title of rank conde ‘count’, a derivative of Latin comes, comitis ‘companion’.English : unexplained.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained. Compare Copas, Copass.Probably a respelling of Kobus or of German possibly Kopes, a variant of Casper.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : status name for a mayor, Middle English, Old French mair(e) (from Latin maior ‘greater’, ‘superior’; compare Mayor). In France the title denoted various minor local officials, and the same is true of Scotland (see Mair 1). In England, however, the term was normally restricted to the chief officer of a borough, and the surname may have been given not only to a citizen of some standing who had held this office, but also as a nickname to a pompous or officious person.German and Dutch : variant of Meyer 1.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant of Meyer 2.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English sire, sier ‘master’ (Old French sire), hence a status name for the master of a household or group of apprentices, or a nickname for an elderly man or perhaps a pompous or domineering person.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly northern), North German, Dutch, and French
English (mainly northern), North German, Dutch, and French : nickname for someone with a severe or pompous manner or perhaps a pageant name for someone who had played the part of a pope or priest, from Middle English pope or Old French pape ‘pope’, Middle Low German, Middle Dutch pape ‘priest’, Old French pape ‘pope’. Compare Papa.German : nickname from a baby word for ‘father’. Compare Baab.
Surname or Lastname
Italian
Italian : from the title of rank conte ‘count’ (from Latin comes, genitive comitis ‘companion’). Probably in this sense (and the Late Latin sense of ‘traveling companion’), it was a medieval personal name; as a title it was no doubt applied ironically as a nickname for someone with airs and graces or simply for someone who worked in the service of a count.English : variant of Count, cognate with 1.French : nickname for someone in the service of a count or for someone who behaved pretentiously, from Old French conte, cunte ‘count’ (of the same derivation as 1).French (Conté) : variant of Comté (see Comte).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English pope (derived via Old English from Late Latin papa ‘bishop’, ‘pope’, from Greek pappas ‘father’, in origin a nursery word.) In the early Christian Church, the Latin term was at first used as a title of respect for male clergy of every rank, but in the Western Church it gradually came to be restricted to bishops, and then only to the bishop of Rome; in the Eastern Church it continued to be used of all priests (see Popov, Papas). The nickname would have been used for a vain or pompous man, or for someone who had played the part of the pope in a pageant or play. The surname is also present in Ireland and Scotland.North German : variant of Poppe.Nathaniel Pope, a “marriner†from London and Bristol, England, patented a property on Northern Neck, VA, in 1651 that later became known as “The Cliftsâ€.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the numerous places throughout England (but especially in the south) named Compton, from Old English cumb ‘short, straight valley’ + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’.
Boy/Male
Greek
A Titan.
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from Old French pontife ‘pontiff’, hence a nickname for someone who had played the role of the pope or a high priest in a medieval religious play, or for a vain or pompous person.
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from Old French champ ‘field’, ‘open land’ (Latin campus ‘plain’, ‘expanse of flat land’), a topographic name for someone who lived in or near a field or expanse of open country, or else in the countryside as opposed to a town.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of various places called Brownell, for example in Yorkshire, Cheshire, and Staffordshire, from Old English brūn ‘brown’ + hyll ‘hill’.Thomas Brownell came from England to Little Compton, RI, in about 1650.
Surname or Lastname
Spanish
Spanish : from copa, plural copas ‘drinking bowl’, applied possibly as a metonymic occupational name for a maker of such vessels or possibly as a topographic name for someone living in a hollow.English : unexplained. Compare Copass, Copus.
Surname or Lastname
English (Surrey)
English (Surrey) : unexplained. Compare Copas, Copus.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin) and French
English (of Norman origin) and French : status name for a professional champion, especially an agent employed to represent one of the parties in a trial by combat, a method of settling disputes current in the Middle Ages. The word comes from Old French champion, campion (Late Latin campio, genitive campionis, a derivative of campus ‘plain’, ‘field of battle’). Compare Campion, Kemp.
COMPTUS STENURUS
COMPTUS STENURUS
Girl/Female
Tamil
Divyanka | தீவà¯à®¯à®‚கா
Divine
Boy/Male
Indian, Tamil
Lord Ganesh
Girl/Female
Indian, Sanskrit, Tamil
A Ragini; Goddess Saraswati
Boy/Male
English German
He who holds Christ in his heart. Famous Bearers: actors Christopher Plummer and Christopher...
Boy/Male
Muslim
The all-glorious, The majestic
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Nature; Beauty
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Heaven; Small Boat
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Abstinent
Girl/Female
Indian
Friendly; Lovely
Male
Czechoslovakian
, a lion.
COMPTUS STENURUS
COMPTUS STENURUS
COMPTUS STENURUS
COMPTUS STENURUS
COMPTUS STENURUS
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Compute
n.
Extent; compass.
v. t.
To compute erroneously.
n.
The principal grounds of a college or school, between the buildings or within the main inclosure; as, the college campus.
n.
One who computes.
imp. & p. p.
of Compute
v. t.
To compute; to count.
n.
The compass plant. See under Compass.
a.
Pompous.
imp. & p. p.
of Compass
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Compass
pl.
of Bow-compass
n.
Compass; circuit; inclosure.
a.
Displaying pomp; stately; showy with grandeur; magnificent; as, a pompous procession.
a.
Ostentatious; pretentious; boastful; vainlorious; as, pompous manners; a pompous style.
a.
Having no compass.
n.
Extent; reach; sweep; capacity; sphere; as, the compass of his eye; the compass of imagination.
n.
An inclosing limit; boundary; circumference; as, within the compass of an encircling wall.