Nature wiki:
>For alternative meanings, see nature (disambiguation). Nature (also called the material world, the material universe, the natural world, and the natural universe) is all matter and energy, especially in its essential form. Nature is the subject of scientific study, and the history of the concept is linked to the history of science. The English word derives from a Latin term, natura, which was in turn a translation of a Greek term, physis (ÏÏÏιÏ). Natura is related to the Latin words relating to "birth", while physis relates to Greek words relating to "growth". In scale, "nature" includes everything from the universal to the subatomic. This includes all things animal, plant, and mineral; all natural resources and events (hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes). It also includes the behaviour of living animals, and processes associated with inanimate objects - the "way" that things change.
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Snake wiki:
>For other uses, see Snake (disambiguation). HenophidiaAniliidaeAnomochilidaeBoidaeBolyeriidaeCylindrophiidaeLoxocemidaePythonidaeTropidophiidaeUropeltidaeXenopeltidaeTyphlopoideaAnomalepididaeLeptotyphlopidaeTyphlopidaeXenophidiaAcrochordidaeAtractaspididaeColubridaeElapidaeHydrophiidaeViperidae Snakes are cold blooded legless reptiles closely related to lizards, which share the order Squamata. There are also several species of legless lizard which superficially resemble snakes, but are not otherwise related to them. A love of snakes is called ophiophilia, a fear of snakes is called ophidiophobia (or snakephobia), a specialist in snakes is an ophiologist.
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