English abbreviation dictionary - cobra
Связанные словари
Cobra
cobra
physiol. abbr.
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act U.S. gov. abbr.
Comprehensive Overall Budget Reconciliation Act U.S. gov. abbr.
Continuation Of Benefits Retirement Act mil. abbr.
Combat Outcome Based on Rules for Attrition mil. abbr.
Cabinet Office Briefing Room A And
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См. в других словарях
1.
~ n a poisonous African or Asian snake that can spread the skin of its neck to make itself look bigger ...Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
2.
(cobras) A cobra is a kind of poisonous snake that can make the skin on the back of its neck into a hood. N-COUNT ...Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
3.
noun Etymology: Portuguese ~ (de capello), literally, hooded snake, from Latin colubra snake Date: 1802 any of several venomous Asian and African elapid snakes (genera Naja and Ophiophagus) that when excited expand the skin of the neck into a hood by movement of the anterior ribs; also any of several related African snakes ...Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
4.
n. any venomous snake of the genus Naja, native to Africa and Asia, with a neck dilated like a hood when excited. Etymology: Port. f. L colubra snake ...Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
Англо-русский Русско-английский экономический словарь
6.
кобра (Naja); индийская кобра, очковая змея (Naja naja); pl аспидовые змеи, аспиды (Elapidae) – Anchieta's cobra – banded cobra – black forest cobra – black-lipped cobra – black-necked cobra – Brasilian false water cobra – Central Asia cobra – common cobra – coral cobra – Egyptian cobra – forest cobra – hooded cobra – hoodless cobra – Indian cobra – Innes' cobra – king cobra – mock cobra – ringed water cobra – snake-eating cobra – spectacled cobra – spitting cobra – tree cobra – true cobra – water cobra – yellow cobra ...Англо-русский Русско-английский биологический словарь
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
Англо-русский словарь
9.
- 1802, from Port. cobra (de capello) "serpent (of the hood)," from L. colubra "a snake," of uncertain origin. The word came to Eng. via India, where the native name is nag. ...Английский Этимологический словарь
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