Bug of temperate regions that infests especially beds and feeds on human blood.
Sinônimos
Examples for "bedbug"
Examples for "bedbug"
1The place was full of roaches and occasionally I killed a bedbug.
2During decades of low bedbug infestation, scientists didn't study them much.
3Well, just some of his nutty stuff, I guess; he's crazier'n a bedbug.
4Grey crushed another bedbug, but his mind was not on it.
5First, you're not a real bedbug but a pirate bug, a close cousin.
1Yes, they introduce diseased chinch bugs into the grain fields with the healthy ones.
2In summer they eat Colorado potato beetles, chinch-bugs, cotton boll-weevils, squash-beetles, grasshoppers and cutworms.
3There are a great many bugs injurious to vegetation, among them the little chinch bugs.
4The chinch-bug is responsible for the loss of five per cent., or one bushel out of every twenty.
5I ain't no pulpit chinch.
1Even if making a new bed bug insecticide were lucrative, there are other challenges.
2This requires intimate knowledge of the bed bug's basic biology.
3Thus, 88% of the bed bug populations collected showed target-site mutations.
4Common bed bug under an electron microscope.
5The worst aspect about this is that we thought we had tackled the bed bug problem before.
1Don't let the Cimex Lectularius bite.
2The bed bug, Cimex lectularius, has re-established itself as a ubiquitous human ectoparasite throughout much of the world during the past two decades.
Translations for cimex lectularius