Give me the meaning of the name DINOSAUR.?
Answers:
DINOSAUR--
In 1841, Sir Richard Owen coined the word "dinosaur" to identify the fossils of extinct reptiles. It traces its origins to the Greek words deinos, meaning "terrible" or "fearfully great," and sauros, meaning "lizard." Newly discovered dinosaurs are named by the discoverer or by the palaeontologist who determines that it represents a new genus (or species). There are many different ways to choose a dinosaur name. Sometimes the name describes something special about its body, head, or feet, such as the triceratops, which means "three-horned head." Some dinosaurs are named after their size or behavior, such as the gigantosaurus, meaning "gigantic lizard," and the velociraptor, meaning "speedy robber." Others are named after the place where they were found, such as the Utahraptor and the Denversaurus, or they are named in honor of a person, such as the Chassternbergia (after Charles Sternberg, the discoverer). Giving names to dinosaurs is serious business and all new names must be reviewed by a panel of scientists and approved by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature.
Dinosaur translates as Monstrous lizard.
1. any chiefly terrestrial, herbivorous or carnivorous reptile of the extinct orders Saurischia and Ornithischia, from the Mesozoic Era, certain species of which are the largest known land animals.
2. something that is unwieldy in size, anachronistically outmoded, or unable to adapt to change: The old steel mill was a dinosaur that cost the company millions to operate.
"Terrible Lizard"
"Dino" is derived from the Greek word "deinos", meaning "terrible". "Saur" is derived from the Greek word "saura" meaning "lizard".
Terrible lizard.
The term 'dinosaur' originates from the Greek words deino and sauros, meaning 'terrible' and 'lizard'. Sir Richard Owen invented the name 'dinosaur' in 1842, to describe an extinct group of terrestrial reptiles that lived during the Mesozoic. At that time, he had only three or four dinosaur skeletons to consider, but many hundreds more have been found since 1842.
Hope this helps.
word dinosaur, meaning "fearfully great lizard," . In Greek, deinos means "fearfully great" and sauros means "lizard."
The taxon Dinosauria was formally named by the English palaeontologist Richard Owen in 1842 as "a distinct tribe or suborder of Saurian reptiles". The term is derived from the Greek words δεινός (deinos meaning "terrible", "fearsome" or "formidable") and σαύρα (saura meaning "lizard" or "reptile"). Owen chose it to express his awe at the size and majesty of the extinct animals, not out of fear or trepidation at their size and often-formidable arsenal of teeth and claws.
Dinosaurs were an extremely varied group of animals; according to a 2006 study, 527 dinosaur genera have been identified with certainty so far, and 1,844 genera are believed to have existed. Some were herbivorous, others carnivorous. Some dinosaurs were bipeds, some were quadrupeds, and others, such as Ammosaurus and Iguanodon, could walk just as easily on two or four legs. Regardless of body type, nearly all known dinosaurs were well-adapted for a predominantly terrestrial, rather than aquatic or aerial, habitat.
Terrible Lizard (translated from Latin)
Dino= terrible
saur= lizard
Dinosaur=terrible lizard.
Funny the things that stick in your mind!
Terrible Lizard
A bit of additional trivia: The Chinese translate "dinosaur" as "kong long" - lierally "dreadful dragon".
Dinosaurs, of course, were not in fact lizards at all, and by some classifications not even reptiles. And many of them weren't particularyl terible, either.
Then again, I know a lot of Homo sapiens who aren't very wise!
the Greek words “deinos” (meaning “terrible”) and “sauros” lizard were used to coin the term dinosaur.
Sir Richard Owen coined the word dinosaur, meaning "fearfully great lizard," in 1842. In Greek, "deinos" means "fearfully great" and "sauros" means "lizard."
Hope this is what you were looking for!
it's from the latin for 'terrible lizard'
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