boa constrictor
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See also: Boa constrictor
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unadapted borrowing from New Latin Boa constrictor.
Noun
[edit]boa constrictor (plural boa constrictors)
- A large tropical American snake, Boa constrictor, that kills its prey by squeezing them.
- 1886 October – 1887 January, H[enry] Rider Haggard, She: A History of Adventure, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., published 1887, →OCLC:
- After him followed a blesbok, then an impala, then a koodoo, then more goats, and many other animals, including a girl sewn up in the shining scaly hide of a boa-constrictor, several yards of which trailed along the ground behind her.
- (loosely) Any large python.
- 1887, Harriet W. Daly, Digging, Squatting, and Pioneering Life in the Northern Territory of South Australia, page 95:
- We found boa constrictors or pythons, whip snakes, the handsome but deadly tiger snake, so called from the peculiar marks on its skin[.]
Usage notes
[edit]- The boa constrictor is the only extant animal whose English common name is the same as its scientific (taxonomic) name. Tyrannosaurus rex, an extinct species, also shares this phenomenon.
Translations
[edit]snake
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