green frog
Noun: 1. A type of frog: A medium-sized frog (Lithobates clamitans or Rana clamitans) native to eastern North America, commonly found in or near marshes, ponds, and other freshwater habitats. It is similar to the bullfrog but smaller.
The term "green frog" is used as a countable noun to refer to this specific species of amphibian. It is often used in biological, ecological, and general descriptive contexts. * We heard the distinctive call of a green frog by the pond. * Green frogs are an important part of the wetland ecosystem. * The biology class is studying the life cycle of the green frog.
- As a modifier: "Green frog" can function as a noun modifier (acting like an adjective) to describe other nouns related to this species.
- The researcher collected green frog tadpoles for the study.
- We identified it by its green frog call.
- Bronze frog: A common color morph or subspecies of the green frog, often with more bronze or brown coloration.
- Lithobates clamitans: The current scientific genus and species name.
- Rana clamitans: A former scientific name still widely recognized.
- None precise: There is no single common English synonym for the species "green frog." Descriptive phrases like "marsh frog" or "pond frog" could refer to it but are not specific synonyms, as they could describe other species.
The term "green frog" almost exclusively refers to the biological species. It is not typically used in idioms or with metaphorical meanings. A literal, non-biological interpretation ("a frog that is green in color") is possible but less common in standard usage, as the capitalized or specific context usually indicates the species.
- similar to bullfrog; found in or near marshes and ponds; of United States and Canada