| lizar | For example, lizards can change the color of their skin and blend with the trees and leaves around them. |
| lizar | That hut is crawling with lizards and insects. |
| lizard | (n) relatively long-bodied reptile with usually two pairs of legs and a tapering tail |
| lizardfish | (n) tropical fishes with large mouths in lizard-like heads; found worldwide, Syn. snakefish, snake-fish |
| lizard orchid | (n) an orchid of the genus Himantoglossum, Syn. Himantoglossum hircinum |
| lizard's-tail | (n) North American herbaceous perennial of wet places having slender curled racemes of small white flowers, Syn. water dragon, Saururus cernuus, swamp lily |
| Lizard | n. [ OE. lesarde, OF. lesarde, F. lézard, L. lacerta, lacertus. Cf. Alligator, Lacerta. ] [ 1913 Webster ] ☞ Most lizards have an elongated body, with four legs, and a long tail; but there are some without legs, and some with a short, thick tail. Most have scales, but some are naked; most have eyelids, but some do not. The tongue is varied in form and structure. In some it is forked, in others, as the chameleons, club-shaped, and very extensible. See Amphisbæna, Chameleon, Gecko, Gila monster, Horned toad, Iguana, and Dragon, 6. [ 1913 Webster ]
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| lizard fish | |
| Lizard's tail | pos>n. (Bot.) A perennial plant of the genus |