- havier. A
group of any
species is a herd. The
adjective of
relation is
cervine; like the
family name Cervidae, this is from Latin: cervus,
meaning stag...
-
perissodactyls Tapirus indicus and
Rhinoceros sondaicus, and a
great variety of
cervine species. Homo
erectus soloensis fossils are also
known from the area. Bornean...
- rat)/murine, cat/feline, rabbit/cunicular, hare/leporine, dog/canine, deer/
cervine, reindeer/rangiferine, fox/vulpine, wolf/lupine, goat/caprine, sheep/ovine...
-
andersoni Cryptosporidium bailey Cryptosporidium bovis Cryptosporidium cervine Cryptosporidium canis Cryptosporidium cuniculus Cryptosporidium ducismarci...
- Latin, came to be used in heraldry. In 1607, it was
first used for living,
cervine animals .
There are 91
antelope species, most of
which are
native to Africa...
- Jim Heckle,
Yvonne Pickens, Rita Nessett), Mark Van
Buren 1981:
Scott Cervine,
Michael Weber 1982: Ed Alonzo,
Lorenzo Clark, Bill
Godwin 1984: Ray Kosby...
-
based on the
first appearance of Euprox,
suggested to be a stem-group
cervine in
Europe at this time.
Modern Cervinae first appeared during the Late...
- skin
designates a
heraldic sign of Bohemia.
Pearls and
corals similar to
cervine horns in
Water hint at the same. A
number of
writers from seventeenth-century...
- The Schomburgk's deer (Rucervus schomburgki) is an
extinct species of deer once
endemic to
central Thailand. It was
described by
Edward Blyth in 1863 and...
- (Indian fable) and The Stag at the Pool (attributed to Aesop).
Another cervine animal, the stag,
appears in an
etiological tale from
Brazil (Why the Tiger...