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In anime: Fightie / Fighter Slime (ブッスラー / 武道家スライム, Bussurā / Budōka Suraimu) Voiced by: Ayasa Itō [9] (Japanese); Veronica Taylor [13] (English) An about 300-year-old fighter slime girl whom Azusa and the others seek out when Falfa is stuck in slime form after getting a crick in her neck. She is very materialistic ...
Superoxide dismutase (SOD, EC 1.15.1.1) is an enzyme that alternately catalyzes the dismutation ... Moreover, superoxide dismutase has the largest k cat /K M ...
Mount Koshka (Russian: Гора́ Ко́шка, Кош-Кая, Соколиная скала, Ukrainian: Гора́ Кі́шка, Crimean Tatar: Qoş qaya) [1] [2] [3] is a mountain in the Crimean Mountains near the settlement of Simeiz within the Greater Yalta metropolitan area.
Onychophora / ɒ n ɪ ˈ k ɒ f ə r ə / (from Ancient Greek: ονυχής, onyches, "claws"; and φέρειν, pherein, "to carry"), commonly known as velvet worms (for their velvety texture and somewhat wormlike appearance) or more ambiguously as peripatus / p ə ˈ r ɪ p ə t ə s / (after the first described genus, Peripatus), is a phylum of elongate, soft-bodied, many-legged animals.
World of Warcraft: Illidan is a Warcraft novel written by William King and published by Del Rey Books on April 12, 2016. In it, more details are revealed about Illidan Stormrage 's actions and intentions than was revealed in The Burning Crusade .
Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos is a high fantasy real-time strategy computer video game developed and published by Blizzard Entertainment released in July 2002. It is the second sequel to Warcraft: Orcs & Humans, after Warcraft II: Tides of Darkness, the third game set in the Warcraft fictional universe, and the first to be rendered in three dimensions.
A displacer beast is a magical six-legged black panther-like feline with a pair of tentacles growing from its shoulders; the beast has an innate "displacement" ability, causing it appear to be several feet away from its actual location.
The modern name "caltrop" is derived from the Old English calcatrippe (heel-trap), [6] [7] such as in the French usage chausse-trape (shoe-trap). The Latin word tribulus originally referred to this and provides part of the modern scientific name of a plant commonly called the caltrop, Tribulus terrestris, whose spiked seed cases resemble caltrops and can injure feet and puncture bicycle tires.