Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
You are like the amphisbaena that was so dear to Césaire.
However, in Amphisbaena alba, there are two types of females.
As in myth, the amphisbaena is a giant serpent with a head at both ends.
Their name is derived from Amphisbaena, a mythical serpent with a head at each end.
The term refers to the amphisbaena serpent in classical mythology.
The amphisbaena appeared in the second edition Monstrous Manual (1993).
Very little is known about the origins of amphisbaena, even less for the Iberian worm lizard.
Based on the amphisbaena, a "mythological, ant-eating serpent with a head at each end."
The album artwork contains symbols reminiscent of the Amphisbaena.
He describes the few monkeys that can be seen in the area, and the strange Amphisbaena, a legless lizard.
The fangs of the Amphisbaena are so poisonous that anything successfully bitten by it dies instantly.
In Greek mythology, the two-headed Amphisbaena dragon was represented with horns.
A new Amphisbaena from Brazil.
There Sharina burns the mummy and gives the snakeskin to Tenoctris-it is from an amphisbaena.
DNA analysis would suggest that there were three separate incidences of limb loss all convergent for amphisbaena formation.
Lady Marian of Heatherdale who runs Amphisbaena Music.
The amphisbaena appeared in the Tome of Horrors (2002) from Necromancer Games.
Anselm reveals that he has nothing to do with the bridge, but if he can get his amphisbaena back, he can repair it.
Despite a superficial resemblance to primitive snakes, amphisbaenians such as Amphisbaena ridleyi have features which distinguish them from other reptiles.
Amphisbaena darwinii is a species of reptile in the genus Amphisbaena.
Using the amphisbaena snakeskin, Tenoctris frees Ansalem from the cyst he was trapped in.
The blood of Medusa also spawned the Amphisbaena (a horned dragon-like creature with a snake-headed tail).
The amphisbaena first appeared in the original first edition Monster Manual (1977), under the "Snake, giant" entry.
Two further new species of Amphisbaena from semi-arid northeast Brasil (Reptilia, Amphisbaenia).
According to folklore, wearing a live Amphisbaena on the body "helps safeguard pregnancy" while wearing a dead snake "helps rheumatism".