Asian Vine Snake
A slender, leaf-green tree snake of South and Southeast Asia with binocular vision and a delicate pointed snout.
Snakes pronounced in 4 syllables that contain E — full profile for each.
You're looking for 4-syllable snakes containing E — here are 21 matches, each linked to a full profile.
A slender, leaf-green tree snake of South and Southeast Asia with binocular vision and a delicate pointed snout.
A spectacular Southeast Asian elapid with deep blue flanks, a red head and tail, and venom glands stretching a quarter of its body length.
A glossy iridescent black mountain python of New Guinea, prized by collectors and considered sacred by some highland communities.
One of the world's largest snakes, a Southeast Asian giant now infamous as an invasive species in the Everglades of Florida.
A widely variable Australasian python with bold geometric patterns, comfortable in trees, rocks, and even suburban roofs.
A handsome chain-patterned North American constrictor that hunts and eats other snakes, including rattlesnakes.
An aggressive, slim Australian elapid responsible for most snakebite deaths on the continent and possessing the world's second-most toxic venom.
The most widely distributed land snake on Earth, a tiny blind burrower spread by potted plants and parthenogenetic reproduction.
A massive, perfectly camouflaged African viper with the longest fangs of any snake, lying motionless in leaf litter for weeks at a time.
A bright emerald-green python of New Guinean and northern Australian rainforests, often photographed coiled neatly on a horizontal branch.
A heavy-bodied Near Eastern viper formerly considered the same species as the Ottoman viper, common across rocky hillsides from Turkey to Iran.
A slim Mediterranean colubrid with a sharply pointed snout, racing through dry scrub and stone walls at remarkable speed.
A southern European viper with a single upward-curving horn on the snout, considered the most dangerous snake in Europe.
A large, uniformly coloured Australian python of rocky watercourses across the tropical north, second only to the scrub python in Australian length.
A large, curious Indo-Pacific marine elapid often encountered on coral reefs, approaching divers without aggression but bearing potent venom.
A slender green arboreal pit viper of Southeast Asian rainforests, named for the American herpetologist Clifford H. Pope.
A heavy, irritable South Asian viper named for Scottish naturalist Patrick Russell, responsible for tens of thousands of fatal bites each year.
A small, irritable Asian viper that produces a rasping warning sound by rubbing its serrated scales together and kills more people each year than any other snake.
A large, agile climber of Korean and Russian forests, also called the Russian rat snake, valued by snake enthusiasts for its cool-temperate hardiness.
A harmless European water snake that mimics the adder's zig-zag pattern as a defence against predators.
A bizarre Southeast Asian dragon snake with three rows of raised dorsal scales that look more like a row of small spines than ordinary scales.
Adjust the filter in the sidebar, or jump to all 4-syllable snakes, all snakes that contain E, or the full snakes index.