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serpent
[sur-puhnt]
noun
a snake.
a wily, treacherous, or malicious person.
a firework that burns with a serpentine motion or flame.
an obsolete wooden wind instrument with a serpentine shape and a deep, coarse tone.
Astronomy., Serpent, the constellation Serpens.
serpent
/ ˈsɜːpənt /
noun
a literary or dialect word for snake
Old Testament a manifestation of Satan as a guileful tempter (Genesis 3:1–5)
a sly, deceitful, or unscrupulous person
an obsolete wind instrument resembling a snake in shape, the bass form of the cornett
a firework that moves about with a serpentine motion when ignited
serpent
The creature in the Book of Genesis that tempts Eve to eat the forbidden fruit, thus committing the first act of the Fall of Man. In the New Testament, the serpent of Genesis is identified with Satan.
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of serpent1
Example Sentences
Think animal jewelry — bridles, straps and other harness parts adorned with eagle heads, rosettes, griffins, busts of Herakles, serpents and lions, often shaped from gold.
And as their fervor grows, so too does his confidence, an ouroboros of mutual reinforcement, a serpent devouring its own tail.
They insert their toes in things like serpents' tails which present to view the shape of scorpions...
At one point, she compares Orlok to a serpent inside her body.
Day in, day out, whatever the time in an always chaotic, often desperate rotation of worldly life, the warrior serpent is on duty.
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