| 释义 | 
		Definition of Amphisbaenia in English: Amphisbaeniaplural nounˌamfɪsˈbiːnɪəˌamfisˈbēnēə Zoology A group of reptiles which comprises the worm lizards. 〔动〕蚯蚓属 Suborder Amphisbaenia, order Squamata Example sentencesExamples -  Snakes, lizards and Amphisbaenia are closely related and belong to a single order, Squamata, with three suborders.
 -  This is one of a suborder of legless lizards called Amphisbaenia (one weird Mexican group actually has two front legs).
 -  This remarkable condition tends to emphasize the distinct status of the Amphisbaenia within the Squamata, as a sister-group equivalent to the lizards or the snakes.
 -  About 150 members of the Suborder Amphisbaenia occur in Central and South America, Africa, and adjacent parts of Europe and Asia.
 -  Rhineura is a member of Amphisbaenia, a lineage of mostly limbless burrowing lizards known from the Paleocene onward.
 
 
 Derivativesadjective & noun Zoology  Other authors have used morphological evidence in support of a relationship of snakes to a clade comprising amphisbaenians and dibamids. Example sentencesExamples -  Caecilians, urodeles and some anurans, snakes, amphisbaenians and some lizards have a stapes, which may be attached to the shoulder girdle or skin, and are well suited to detecting low frequency vibrations from the substrate.
 -  Extant humeralrotation diggers exhibit broad palms and short non-ungual phalanges, and include moles and some frogs and amphisbaenians.
 -  In snakes and amphisbaenians M. iliocostalis has its origin from either a tendon (most squamates) or a tendonous sheet arising from the anteroventral half of M. longissimus dorsi.
 -  Scleroglossa is a diverse and speciose group including all remaining lizard families, plus snakes and amphisbaenians.
 
 
 
 OriginModern Latin, from Greek amphisbaina, from amphis 'both' + bainein 'go, walk'.    Definition of Amphisbaenia in US English: Amphisbaeniaplural nounˌamfisˈbēnēə Zoology A group of reptiles which comprises the worm lizards. 〔动〕蚯蚓属 Suborder Amphisbaenia, order Squamata Example sentencesExamples -  This remarkable condition tends to emphasize the distinct status of the Amphisbaenia within the Squamata, as a sister-group equivalent to the lizards or the snakes.
 -  Rhineura is a member of Amphisbaenia, a lineage of mostly limbless burrowing lizards known from the Paleocene onward.
 -  This is one of a suborder of legless lizards called Amphisbaenia (one weird Mexican group actually has two front legs).
 -  Snakes, lizards and Amphisbaenia are closely related and belong to a single order, Squamata, with three suborders.
 -  About 150 members of the Suborder Amphisbaenia occur in Central and South America, Africa, and adjacent parts of Europe and Asia.
 
 
 OriginModern Latin, from Greek amphisbaina, from amphis ‘both’ + bainein ‘go, walk’.     |