snail - meaning and definition. What is snail
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What (who) is snail - definition

MOLLUSC
Wallfish; Snails; Snale; Marine snail; 🐌; Jono Hawkins; Ochu
  • French cooked snails]]
  • Dewi Sekartaji as Keong Emas
  • ''[[Helix pomatia]]'' sealed in its shell with a [[calcareous]] [[epiphragm]]
  • Larco Museum Collection]], Lima, Peru
  • The use of [[love dart]]s by the land snail ''[[Monachoides vicinus]]'' is a form of [[sexual selection]]
  •  Snails that live in nature but are fed by humans. (Kadıköy, Istanbul - Turkey)
  • Slug
  • ''[[Cornu aspersum]]'' – garden snail

snail         
n.
1.
Slug.
2.
Drone, idler, sluggard, laggard, slug.
3.
Snail-clover, snail-trefoil (Medicago scutellata).
snail         
(snails)
1.
A snail is a small animal with a long, soft body, no legs, and a spiral-shaped shell. Snails move very slowly.
N-COUNT
2.
If you say that someone does something at a snail's pace, you are emphasizing that they are doing it very slowly, usually when you think it would be better if they did it much more quickly.
The train was moving now at a snail's pace...
PHRASE: PHR after v [emphasis]
snail         
¦ noun a slow-moving mollusc with a spiral shell into which the whole body can be withdrawn. [Many species in the class Gastropoda.]
Phrases
snail's pace a very slow speed or rate of progress.
Origin
OE sn?g(e)l, of Gmc origin.

Wikipedia

Snail

A snail is a shelled gastropod. The name is most often applied to land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod molluscs. However, the common name snail is also used for most of the members of the molluscan class Gastropoda that have a coiled shell that is large enough for the animal to retract completely into. When the word "snail" is used in this most general sense, it includes not just land snails but also numerous species of sea snails and freshwater snails. Gastropods that naturally lack a shell, or have only an internal shell, are mostly called slugs, and land snails that have only a very small shell (that they cannot retract into) are often called semi-slugs.

Snails have considerable human relevance, including as food items, as pests, and as vectors of disease, and their shells are used as decorative objects and are incorporated into jewelry. The snail has also had some cultural significance, tending to be associated with lethargy. The snail has also been used as a figure of speech in reference to slow-moving things. The snail is the same or similar shape as the cochlea.

Examples of use of snail
1. They wrap the silk around the snail, trapping it so the snail cannot escape by dropping off the leaf.
2. Once the snail is immobilised, the caterpillar wedges its case next to the snail shell before stretching its body out of the case and into the shell.
3. Forty percent of escargot, the snail dish, is butter.
4. Then, the researchers say, it‘s snail–snacking time.
5. Others are more obscure: West Indian manatee ($'.' million), razorback sucker ($7.5 million). No species of snail gets more than $1 million on its own, but together, the 32 species of snail brought in well over $2 million.