• Tar_Alcaran
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    8 months ago

    This is just because English sucks, or English speaking people suck at naming things. Let me show you how it’s done:

    In Dutch:

    Horseshoe crabs are called “dagger crabs”, and look what it’s dragging behind.

    Cuttlefish are called “ink fish”, and tadaa.

    Jellyfish are “kwallen”, which means roughly “annoying person”, and they’re pretty annoying.

    Bald eagles are “American Eagles”, you’re welcome.

    A sand dollar is called a “sea coin”, because of where it lives and what it resembles, which is way more accurate.

    And a fly is still a fly.

  • Thelsim
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    688 months ago

    Secretarybird: refuses to schedule my meetings

    • @atomicorange@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      We’re more of an autonomous collective!

      I like the philosophical implications of the word king in the context of king snakes. For snakes, it just means that their diet consists primarily of other snakes. This implies that to be a king is to be a predator who preys on his own subjects.

    • @bdkmshr
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      118 months ago

      They’re probably anarchist

  • @electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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    298 months ago

    In my town there’s a shop that sells rocks and crystals etc. They also sell sand dollars for $1. That’s right, there’s a 1:1 conversion rate between sand dollars and USD.

    • @Cihta@lemmy.world
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      48 months ago

      Interesting. In south FL you can (or could, been a while) hit certain places and find the keyhole variant by the hundreds. Fascinating creature, all those tube feet to move. It’s illegal to take them but that didn’t stop shops from selling the ones that “washed up” which doesn’t really happen.

      But for some reason people actually buy them. It’s a skeleton of a creature someone scooped up and let bake in the sun for a month. Kinda creepy!

        • @Cihta@lemmy.world
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          28 months ago

          It’s quite possible, just not my experience. I’ve seen a lot of really neat shells and stuff wash up but not sand dollars. So i don’t want to suggest people actually do that. But it’s certainly easy enough. Probably why it’s illegal.

          I do suggest, if you get the chance, to check them out live. As i kid i had a few skeletons but seeing them in action was way cooler. It’s not super exciting or anything, just kinda neat. Same as another one on that list - the horseshoe crab. I helped one get out of a shallow and it seemed appreciative… at least as much as an ancient creature can be.

          Stingrays are kinda dicks though so keep that in mind.

          • brianorca
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            48 months ago

            They probably do wash up sometimes, just not often enough to support the tourist trade.

  • theharber
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    288 months ago

    Animals that live up to their names ;

    • Sea cucumber
    • Woodpecker
    • Babadook
  • Captain Aggravated
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    238 months ago

    Animal that does not live up to its name:

    cuttlefish - is not a fish

    Animal that does live up to its name:

    woodpecker

    • @Dave@lemmy.nz
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      78 months ago

      Peacocks have cocks. Peahens do not.

      Peacocks don’t have a pecker in their privates. Instead of a johnson, they have a cloaca. No willie.

      • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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        8 months ago

        The cloaca holds both the penis and the butthole on a male, and the vagina on a female. They still have penetrative sex. They’re not fish. It just doesn’t poke outside the body.

        • @Dave@lemmy.nz
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          28 months ago

          Can you back that up? I’ve spent the last 10 minutes searching up cloaca diagrams and pictures and articles and I can’t find any decent information about it. Only saying that they do a cloaca kiss and transfer sperm, but then I can’t find a cloaca diagram that labels any part as a penis.

          • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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            8 months ago

            I couldn’t find anything specific to peacocks either, but plenty of various other birds, including chickens which have the smallest little nub of a penis to ducks and their long, twisty corkscrew cock.

            • @Dave@lemmy.nz
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              38 months ago

              Yeah, I’m not sure you could call whatever a chicken does “penetrative”, and I feel like the term “penis” has a specific meaning that wouldn’t include cloaca.

    • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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      58 months ago

      cock (n.1) “male of the domestic fowl,” from Old English cocc “male bird,” Old French coc (12c., Modern French coq), Old Norse kokkr, all of echoic origin. Compare Albanian kokosh “cock,” Greek kikkos, Sanskrit kukkuta, Malay kukuk.

      cock (n.3)

      “penis,” 1610s, but certainly older and suggested in word-play from at least 15c.; also compare pillicock “penis,” attested from early 14c.

      They’re called peacocks because they’re peafowl who are cocks. It’s a way older term than the slang usage.

    • @ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      18 months ago

      Red Panda. Not Red, not a panda

      But pretty fucking amazing with that kicking bowls onto her head while riding a unicycle thing - while listening to the world’s most annoying song ever.

      • @Lophostemon@aussie.zone
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        148 months ago

        I was under the impression that male birds do not possess a protruding organ but indeed have a hole too, hence ‘no cock’.

        • @Citheronia@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          didn’t think i would be googling “peacock genitalia” today. anyway, you are right. i was confused because I know that ducks have penises, but as I just found out, ducks are actually an exception in the bird world. most birds just kind of rub their holes together. this is sometimes called “cloacal kiss”, which is really funny.

    • @Taleya@aussie.zone
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      208 months ago

      Peacocks actually have no penis whatsoever. Be glad. You give a bird a penis and they get really into rape