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Salamander vs Lissamphibian - What's the difference?

salamander | lissamphibian |

As nouns the difference between salamander and lissamphibian

is that salamander is a long, slender, chiefly terrestrial amphibian of the order caudata, resembling a lizard or a newt while lissamphibian is any of the living amphibians of the subclass lissamphibia , including the frog and salamander families.

As a verb salamander

is to use a (cooking utensil) in a cooking process.

As an adjective lissamphibian is

characteristic of these creatures.

salamander

Noun

(en noun)
  • A long, slender, chiefly terrestrial amphibian of the order Caudata, resembling a lizard or a newt.
  • * 1672 , (Thomas Browne), (Pseudodoxia Epidemica)'', 1852, Simon Wilkin (editor), ''The Works of Sir Thomas Browne , Volume 1, page 292,
  • and most plainly Pierius, whose words in his hieroglyphicks are these: "Whereas it is commonly said that a salamander extinguisheth fire, we have found by experience that it is so far from quenching hot coals, that it dyeth immediately therein."
  • * {{quote-magazine, date=2012-01
  • , author=Douglas Larson , title=Runaway Devils Lake , volume=100, issue=1, page=46 , magazine= citation , passage=Devils Lake is where I began my career as a limnologist in 1964, studying the lake’s neotenic salamanders and chironomids, or midge flies. […] The Devils Lake Basin is an endorheic, or closed, basin covering about 9,800 square kilometers in northeastern North Dakota.}}
  • (mythology) A creature much like a lizard that is resistant to and lives in fire, hence the elemental being of fire.
  • * 1920 , , The Understanding Heart , Chapter XI
  • “Not a chance, Ranger,” Bob Mason was speaking. “This little cuss is a salamander . He's been travelling through fire all day and there isn't a blister on him. …”
  • * 1849 , John Brand, Observations on the Popular Antiquities of Great Britain: Chiefly Illustrating the Origin of Our Vulgar and Provincial Customs, Ceremonies, and Superstitions , Volume 3, page 372
  • "There is a vulgar error," says the author of the Brief Natural History, p. 91, "that a salamander' lives in the fire. Yet both Galen and Dioscorides refute this opinion; and Mathiolus, in his Commentaries upon Dioscorides, a very famous physician, affirms of them, that by casting of many a ' salamander into the fire for tryal he found it false. The same experiment is likewise avouched by Joubertus."
  • (cooking) A metal utensil with a flat head which is heated and put over a dish to brown the top.
  • * 1977 , Richard Daunton-Fear, Penelope Vigar, Australian Colonial Cookery (discussing 19th century cookery), Rigby, 1977, ISBN 0-7270-0187-6, page 41
  • The salamander , a fairly long metal utensil with a flat rounded head, was left in the fire until red hot and then used to brown the top of a dish without further cooking.
  • (cooking) A small broiler, used in professional cookery primarily for browning.
  • The chef first put the steak under the salamander to sear the outside.
  • *
  • The (pouched gopher), , of the southern United States.
  • (UK, obsolete) A large poker.
  • (Halliwell)
  • (metallurgy) Solidified material in a furnace hearth.
  • Hyponyms

    * (amphibian) siredon

    Derived terms

    * (cave salamander) * fire salamander * giant salamander * mole salamander * tiger salamander

    Verb

    (en verb)
  • To use a (cooking utensil) in a cooking process.
  • * 19th century (quoted 1977) , recipe in Richard Daunton-Fear, Penelope Vigar, Australian Colonial Cookery , Rigby, ISBN 978-0-7270-0187-0, page 41:
  • When cold, sprinkle the custard thickly with sugar and salamander it.
  • *
  • ----

    lissamphibian

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • Any of the living amphibians of the subclass Lissamphibia , including the frog and salamander families.
  • Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • Characteristic of these creatures.