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serpent

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: Serpent and sèrpent

English

Etymology

    From Middle English serpent, from Old French serpent (snake, serpent), from Latin serpēns (snake), present active participle of serpere (to creep, crawl), from Proto-Italic *serpō, from Proto-Indo-European *serp-. In this sense, displaced native Old English nǣdre (snake, serpent), whence Modern English adder.

    Compare Sanskrit सर्प (sarpa, snake), which is a descendant of the same Proto-Indo-European word as serpent.

    Pronunciation

    Noun

    serpent (plural serpents)

    1. (now literary) A snake, especially a large or dangerous one.
      • 1712, A. Hill, chapter 9, in The Book of Ecclesiastes Paraphrased. A Divine Poem., Newcastle upon Tyne: J. White, page 38:
        He falls into it, who has digg'd a Pit.
        Who breaks a Hedge is with a Serpent bit.
      • 1879, Charles H. Eden, chapter III, in Ula, in Veldt and Laager: A Tale of the Zulus., copyright edition, Hamburg: Karl Grädener, page 45:
        Coiled up behind the shrub, [] was a green imamba, the most dreaded of all South African serpents.
      • 1946 October, Archibald Rutledge, “Along Nature's Trail”, in Boys' Life, volume 36, number 10, Boy Scouts of America, Inc., →ISSN, page 40:
        Any serpent six feet long looks formidable; and over that length, one takes on the aspect of a chimera.
    2. (figurative) A subtle, treacherous, malicious person.
      Synonyms: backstabber, double-crosser; see also Thesaurus:betrayer
    3. (music) An obsolete wind instrument in the brass family, whose shape is suggestive of a snake (Wikipedia article).
    4. A kind of firework with a serpentine motion.
    5. (mythology, fantasy) A snake-like monster, such as a dragon or sea serpent.
      • 1961, Norma Lorre Goodrich, “Beowulf”, in The Medieval Myths, New York: The New American Library, page 46:
        Then Beowulf too rallied. With his whetted dagger he slit a gash in the serpent's middle.

    Synonyms

    Terms derived from Germanic roots
    Terms derived from Latin

    Hyponyms

    Of the sense “a firework”

    Meronyms

    Of the sense “a snake”

    Holonyms

    Of the sense “a snake”

    Derived terms

    Terms derived from “serpent”
    Terms derived from Latin “serpēns

    Translations

    The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

    Verb

    serpent (third-person singular simple present serpents, present participle serpenting, simple past and past participle serpented)

    1. (obsolete, intransitive) To wind or meander
    2. (obsolete, transitive) To encircle.

    See also

    Anagrams

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    Catalan

    Etymology

    Inherited from Latin serpentem, from serpō (crawl, creep).

    Pronunciation

    Noun

    serpent m or f (plural serpents)

    1. snake
      Synonym: serp

    Dutch

    Dutch Wikipedia has an article on:
    Wikipedia nl

    Etymology

    From Middle Dutch serpent, from Old French serpent (snake, serpent), from Latin serpēns (snake), from the verb serpō (I creep, crawl).

    Pronunciation

    Noun

    serpent n or f or m (plural serpenten, diminutive serpentje n)

    1. (formal, dated) snake
      Synonym: slang
    2. (formal) serpent, serpentine dragon, large snake
      Synonym: slang
    3. an unpleasant, spiteful or foulmouthed person, especially used of women
      Synonym: slang

    Noun

    serpent f (plural serpenten, diminutive serpentje n)

    1. (music) serpent (wind instrument)

    Descendants

    • West Frisian: serpint

    Anagrams

    French

    Etymology

      Inherited from Middle French serpent, from Old French serpent, from Latin serpentem, accusative form of serpēns.

      Pronunciation

      Noun

      serpent m (plural serpents, feminine serpente)

      1. snake

      Derived terms

      Further reading

      Anagrams

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      Latin

      Verb

      serpent

      1. third-person plural future active indicative of serpō

      Middle French

      Etymology

        Inherited from Old French serpent, from Latin serpentem, accusative form of serpēns.

        Noun

        serpent m (plural serpenz)

        1. snake

        Descendants

        Old French

        Etymology

          Inherited from Latin serpentem, accusative form of serpēns.

          Pronunciation

          • IPA(key): /serˈpẽnt/, (later) /serˈpãnt/

          Noun

          serpent oblique singular, m (oblique plural serpenz or serpentz, nominative singular serpenz or serpentz, nominative plural serpent)

          1. snake

          Descendants

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          Romanian

          Etymology

          Borrowed from French serpent or English serpent.

          Noun

          serpent n (plural serpente)

          1. (music) serpent

          Declension

          More information singular, plural ...

          Romansch

          Alternative forms

          Etymology

          From Latin serpēns, serpentem.

          Noun

          serpent m (plural serpents)

          1. (Surmiran) snake

          Synonyms

          • (Rumantsch Grischun, Puter, Vallader) serp
          • (Sursilvan) siarp
          • (Sutsilvan) zearp
          • (Surmiran) zerp

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