"Ptilopteri" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Ptilopteri is a term used in biology to describe a specific group of extinct insectivorous theropod dinosaurs during the Jurassic period.
Pterylosis refers to excessive skin flaking or scaling, typically on the eyelids, due to an abnormal thickening of the skin. It typically occurs in the apocrine gland areas, such as the armpits, groin, and eyelids.
Ptiloceurus is a genus of extinct genus of small theropod dinosaur that lived during the Middle Triassic of South Africa.
Ptilodontoidea is an extinct suborder of small mammals that lived during the Cenozoic era. The name comes from the Greek words "ptilo-" meaning feathered and "odonto-" meaning tooth, in reference to the distinctive teeth of these animals.<br><br>Ptilodontids were rodent-like mammals with small bodies, typically weighing around 100-500 grams and measuring about 15-40 cm in length. They were herbivores and had specialized teeth with complex structures that allowed them to eat tough plant material.<br><br>These animals had a wide geographic range, with fossils found in North America, Europe, Asia, and South America. They are thought to have evolved from a common ancestor with modern rodents around 60-80 million years ago, and were among the first mammals to colonize the post-dinosaur world.<br><br>Ptilodontoidea is an important group of mammals for scientists to study because they provide valuable insights into the early evolution of rodents and the radiation of mammalian lineages.
The Ptilonorhynchidae is a family of birds commonly known as bowerbirds. They are found in the rainforests of Australia and New Guinea, and are known for their unique courtship rituals and remarkable bird displays.
A type of bird species, specifically a type of tinamou, a group of flightless or near-flightless birds native to Central and South America, commonly known as "Inchmotmot" in some parts of the world.
Ptilopaedes are an extinct genus of plesiosaurs, a group of marine reptiles that lived during the Jurassic period.
Relating to the ptilinum, the small club-shaped bar or stiffning at the base of the radicle (embryonic root) of a plant, both in seedlings and in adults.
A ptisan or munjew (Persian: ]<br><br>Ptisan (plural ptisans) is the term for coffee in Persian (Farsi). A skinny shot of espresso, often served without sugar of milk. The drink is often used as an appetite-stimulant in Iran and Afghanistan.
A form of government in which those who are born into a position of poverty or low social class have a higher percentage of the power and control, often contrasted with a plutocracy or aristocracy.
Referring to the Ptolemaic period or associated with the Ptolemaic dynasty, a Greek dynasty that ruled Egypt after the conquest by Alexander the Great. The term can also refer to the astronomical model developed by Claudius Ptolemy, a Greek mathematician and astronomer who described a geocentric model of the universe, with Earth at its center.
Ptolemais is a name that appears in Greek history and geography. <br><br>In ancient times, Ptolemais was a city in Ptolemaic Egypt, established by the Ptolemaic Kingdom in the 3rd century BC. <br><br>It is derived from the name of Ptolemy I Soter, one of Alexander the Great's generals who became the ruler of Egypt after Alexander's death. <br><br>The name Ptolemais can be broken down into two components: "Ptolema-" comes from Ptolemy, and "-is" is a suffix used to form feminine place names in ancient Greek.