Citations:lizardry

Noun: "the state or quality of being a lizard"

 * 1940, Esmé Wingfield-Stratford, Crusade for Civilization, George Routledge (1940), page 19:
 * just as we can imagine that when Tyrannosaurus met Brontosaurus, no consideration of common lizardry prevented them from tearing each other to pieces.
 * 1994, Greg Matthews, The Wisdom of Stones, HarperCollins (1994), ISBN 9780060177386, page 112:
 * From the tapering, almost dainty tip, forward along the serrated battlements of Blighty's quickly fattening tail, to the splayed rear legs and the belly so broad it lay flattened against the ground beneath it, to the awkwardly placed forelegs with their fat and pointed claws, the thing was too long for mere lizardry, too predatory in its watchfulness, its complete lack of fear before a human, to be nothing more than a reptile.
 * 2008, Diane Morgan, Snakes in Myth, Magic, and History: The Story of a Human Obsession, Praeger Frederick (2008), ISBN 9780812982213, page 11:
 * And if you happen to turn one of them over, you'd discover not the single row of belly scales characteristic of snakes but several rows of small scales indicative of lizardry.

Noun: ?

 * 2011, Calvin Trillin, Quite Enough of Calvin Trillin: Forty Years of Funny Stuff, Random House (2012), ISBN 0812982215, page 176:
 * "A few days ago, I dropped in to see some friends of mine, whom I'll call Ralph and Myrna Cole, and discovered they had bought a type of lizard called a gecko," he continued. “When I asked what had driven them to lizardry, Ralph Cole informed me that geckos are to cockroaches what New York bus drivers are to passengers—natural enemies.