: any of a class (Chilopoda) of long flattened many-segmented predaceousarthropods with each segment bearing one pair of legs of which the foremost pair is modified into poison fangs
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In addition to helping researchers better understand what Arthropleura looked like, the discovery also draws a closer evolutionary connection between modern millipedes and centipedes.—Ashley Strickland, CNN, 18 Oct. 2024 Eugene’s centipede necklace—the same necklace worn by the man Lee seduced at the beginning of the film—has come alive and is moving.—Barry Levitt, TIME, 6 Dec. 2024 This unique invertebrate — and its leg-deficient relative, the centipede — is more closely related to lobsters, crayfish and shrimp, despite spending its days foraging in the leaf litter instead of on ocean floors.—Irene Wright, Miami Herald, 7 Jan. 2025 Spiders, centipedes, and earwigs are natural predators of silverfish.—Nafeesah Allen, Better Homes & Gardens, 4 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for centipede
Word History
Etymology
Latin centipeda, from centi- + ped-, pes foot — more at foot
: any of a class of long flattened arthropods that have many segments with each segment having one pair of legs except for the first segment which has a pair of poison fangs compare millipede
Etymology
from Latin centipeda "centipede," from centi- "hundred" and -peda, from ped-, pes "foot" — related to pedestrian
: any member of the class Chilopoda of long flattened many-segmented predaceous arthropods with each segment bearing one pair of legs of which the foremost pair is modified into poison fangs
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