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Research Results For 'Brood'

COLLECTIVE NOUN

A collective noun (or collective name) is a name which denotes or represents a number of individual items. For example, a number of sheep together is known as a 'flock'. The word 'flock' is the collective noun for a number of sheep. Some items have multiple collective nouns, for example a collection of goats can be known as a 'herd', a 'tribe' or a 'trip'.


  • Ambush is the collective noun for a group of tigers.

  • Army is the collective noun for a group of frogs, ants,

  • Array is the collective noun for a group of hedgehogs.

  • Badelynge is the collective noun for a group of ducks on the ground.

  • Bale is the collective noun for a group of turtles.

  • Barren is the collective noun for a group of mules.

  • Basket is the collective noun for a group of plums.

  • Battery is the collective noun for a group of barracuda.

  • Bazaar is the collective noun for a group of guillemots.

  • Bed is the collective noun for a group of clams.

  • Bench is the collective noun for a group of bishops, magistrates.

  • Bevy is the collective noun for a group of quail, roes, swans, pheasants, ladies.

  • Brace is the collective noun for a group of bucks.

  • Brood is the collective noun for a group of chickens.

  • Building is the collective noun for a group of rooks.

  • Bunch is the collective noun for a group of grapes, flowers.

  • Bundle is the collective noun for a group of asparagus.

  • Business is the collective noun for a group of ferrets.

  • Caravan is the collective noun for a group of camels.

  • Cast is the collective noun for a group of hawks, falcons.

  • Cete is the collective noun for a group of badgers.

  • Charm is the collective noun for a group of goldfinches.

  • Chatter is the collective noun for a group of budgerigars.

  • Chattering is the collective noun for a group of choughs.

  • Chine is the collective noun for a group of polecats.

  • Clamour is the collective noun for a group of rooks.

  • Clous is the collective noun for a group of gnats.

  • Clowder is the collective noun for a group of cats.

  • Clump is the collective noun for a group of trees.

  • Cluster is the collective noun for a group of grapes, spiders.

  • Clutch is the collective noun for a group of eggs.

  • Clutter is the collective noun for a group of spiders.

  • Colony is the collective noun for a group of gulls, frogs, penguins, ants, beavers.

  • Company is the collective noun for a group of widgeon, parrots.

  • Congregation is the collective noun for a group of plovers.

  • Convocation is the collective noun for a group of eagles.

  • Covert is the collective noun for a group of coots.

  • Covey is the collective noun for a group of partridges, grouse.

  • Crash is the collective noun for a group of rhinoceros.

  • Crowd is the collective noun for a group of ibis.

  • Cry is the collective noun for a group of hunting dogs.

  • Deceit is the collective noun for a group of lapwings.

  • Den is the collective noun for a group of snakes.

  • Descent is the collective noun for a group of woodpeckers.

  • Dole is the collective noun for a group of turtles.

  • Dopping is the collective noun for a group of sheldrakes.

  • Dout is the collective noun for a group of wild cats.

  • Down is the collective noun for a group of hares.

  • Drift is the collective noun for a group of swine.

  • Drove is the collective noun for a group of donkeys, cattle, pigs.

  • Dryet is the collective noun for a group of swine.

  • Earth is the collective noun for a group of foxes.

  • Erst is the collective noun for a group of bees.

  • Exaltation is the collective noun for a group of larks in flight.

  • Fall is the collective noun for a group of woodcock.

  • Family is the collective noun for a group of sardines.

  • Fesnyng is the collective noun for a group of ferrets.

  • Flight is the collective noun for a group of dunlins.

  • Fling is the collective noun for a group of oxbirds, sandpipers.

  • Float is the collective noun for a group of crocodiles.

  • Flock is the collective noun for a group of sheep, birds, swifts.

  • Gaggle is the collective noun for a group of geese on the ground - rather than in flight.

  • Galaxy is the collective noun for a group of beauties

  • Gam is the collective noun for a group of whales, porpoises, dolphins.

  • Gang is the collective noun for a group of elk.

  • Gang is the collective noun for a group of slaves, prisoners, thieves.

  • Gleam is the collective noun for a group of herring.

  • Grist is the collective noun for a group of bees.

  • Haras is the collective noun for a group of horses.

  • Herd is the collective noun for a group of deer, goats, cattle, antelope, seals, swans, curlews.

  • Hill is the collective noun for a group of ruffs.

  • Hive is the collective noun for a group of bees.

  • Hover is the collective noun for a group of trout.

  • Husk is the collective noun for a group of hares.

  • Kennel is the collective noun for a group of dogs.

  • Kindle is the collective noun for a group of kittens.

  • Knab is the collective noun for a group of toads.

  • Knot is the collective noun for a group of toads.

  • Labour is the collective noun for a group of moles.

  • Leap is the collective noun for a group of leopards.

  • Leash is the collective noun for a group of bucks.

  • Litter is the collective noun for a group of pups, whelps, pigs, cubs.

  • Murder is the collective noun for a group of crows.

  • Murmuration is the collective noun for a group of starlings.

  • Muster is the collective noun for a group of peacocks.

  • Mutation is the collective noun for a group of thrush.

  • Mute is the collective noun for a group of hounds.

  • Nest is the collective noun for a group of ants, mice, rabbits, wasps.

  • Nye is the collective noun for a group of pheasants.

  • Pace is the collective noun for a group of asses.

  • Pack is the collective noun for a group of hounds, wolves, grouse.

  • Paddling is the collective noun for a group of ducks in water.

  • Parliament is the collective noun for a group of owls.

  • Pit is the collective noun for a group of snakes.

  • Pitying is the collective noun for a group of turtle doves.

  • Plump is the collective noun for a group of woodcock, wildfowl.

  • Pod is the collective noun for a group of peas, whiting, whales, seals.

  • Pride is the collective noun for a group of lions.

  • Pump is the collective noun for a group of ducks in flight.

  • Punnet is the collective noun for a group of strawberries.

  • Rafter is the collective noun for a group of turkeys.

  • Rag is the collective noun for a group of colts.

  • Richesse is the collective noun for a group of martens.

  • Roost is the collective noun for a group of pigeons.

  • Rope is the collective noun for a group of onions.

  • Run is the collective noun for a group of poultry.

  • Rush is the collective noun for a group of pochards.

  • School is the collective noun for a group of porpoises, whales, dolphins.

  • Sedge is the collective noun for a group of cranes, bitterns, herons.

  • Shoal is the collective noun for a group of fish.

  • Show is the collective noun for a group of dogs.

  • Shrewdness is the collective noun for a group of apes.

  • Siege is the collective noun for a group of cranes, bitterns, herons.

  • Skein is the collective noun for a group of geese in flight.

  • Skulk is the collective noun for a group of foxes.

  • Sleuth is the collective noun for a group of bears.

  • Sloth is the collective noun for a group of bears.

  • Smuck is the collective noun for a group of jellyfish.

  • Sord is the collective noun for a group of wildfowl.

  • Sounder is the collective noun for a group of swine, boars.

  • Spinney is the collective noun for a group of trees.

  • Spring is the collective noun for a group of teals.

  • String is the collective noun for a group of race horses.

  • Stud is the collective noun for a group of mares.

  • Sute is the collective noun for a group of bloodhounds, wildfowl.

  • Swarm is the collective noun for a group of ants, gnats, bees, flies.

  • Team is the collective noun for a group of ducks in flight, oxen.

  • Thicket is the collective noun for a group of trees.

  • Tiding is the collective noun for a group of magpies.

  • Tower is the collective noun for a group of giraffes.

  • Tribe is the collective noun for a group of goats.

  • Trip is the collective noun for a group of goats.

  • Troop is the collective noun for a group of baboons, monkeys, kangaroos.

  • Troubling is the collective noun for a group of goldfish.

  • Unkindness is the collective noun for a group of ravens.

  • Venue is the collective noun for a group of vultures.

  • Volery is the collective noun for a group of birds.

  • Walk is the collective noun for a group of snipe.

  • Watch is the collective noun for a group of nightingales.

  • Wing is the collective noun for a group of plovers.

  • Wisp is the collective noun for a group of snipe.

  • Yoke is the collective noun for a group of oxen.


Research Collective Noun

APODERUS

Picture of Apoderus

Apoderus is a genus of large (up to 8 mm long) Snout Beetles (Curculionidae). As with some other species the females construct cradles made from leaves for their brood in which the larvae develop and pupate.
Research Apoderus

BATON BLUE

Picture of Baton Blue

The Baton Blue (Philotes baton) is a butterfly of the family Lycaenidae found in west, south and central Europe flying from April to June and a second brood from July to September. The Baton Blue is fond of thyme, and is to be found in dry places overgrown with thyme.
Research Baton Blue

BEE

Picture of Bee

The bee is a four winged stinging insect of the order Hymenoptera. Bees form the super-family Apoidea of the sub-order Apocrita.

The most important member of the family is the common hive or honey bee (Apis mellifica). It belongs to the warmer parts of the Eastern Hemisphere, but is now naturalized in the Western. A hive commonly consists of one mother or queen, from 600 to 800 males or drones, and from 15,000 to 20,000 working bees, formerly termed neuters, but now known to be imperfectly-developed females. The last-mentioned, the smallest, have twelve joints to their antennae, and six abdominal rings, and are provided with a sting; there is, on the outside of the hind-legs, a smooth hollow, edged with hairs, called the basket, in which the kneaded pollen or bee-bread, the food of the larvae, is stored for transit.

The queen has the same characteristics, but is of larger size, especially in the abdomen; she has also a sting. The males, or drones, differ from both the preceding by having thirteen joints to the antennae; a rounded head, with larger eyes, elongated and united at the summit; and no stings. According to Huber the working-bees are themselves divisible into two classes: one, the cirieres, devoted to the collection of provisions, etc; the other, smaller and more delicate, employed exclusively within the hive in rearing the young.

The mouth of the bee is adapted for both masticatory and suctorial purposes, the honey being conveyed thence to the anterior stomach or crop, communicating with a second stomach in which alone a digestive process can be traced. The queen, whose sole office is to propagate the species, has two large ovaries, consisting of a great number of small cavities, each containing sixteen or seventeen eggs. The inferior half-circles, except the first and last, on the abdomen of working-bees, have each on their inner surface two cavities, where the wax, secreted by the bee from its saccharine food, is formed in layers, and comes out from between the abdominal rings.

Respiration takes place by means of air-tubes which branch out to all parts of the body, the bee being exceedingly sensitive to an impure atmosphere. Of the organs of sense the most important are the antennae, deprivation of these resulting in a species of derangement. The majority of entomologists regard their function as in the first place auditory, but they are exceedingly ssensitive to tactual impressions, and are apparently the principal means of mutual communication.

Bees undergo perfect metamorphosis, the young appearing first as larvae, then changing to pupae, from which the imagosor perfect insects spring. Whether the offspring are to be female or male is said to be dependent upon the contact or absence of contact of the egg with the impregnating fluid received from the male and stored in a special sac communicating with the oviduct, unfertilized eggs producing males. The further question whether the offspring shall be queens or workers is resolved by the influence of environment upon function. The enlargement of a cell to the size of a royal chamber and the nourishment of its inmate with a special kind of food appear to be sufficient to transform an ordinary working-bee larva into a fully-developed female or queen-bee.


The season of fecundation occurs about the beginning of summer, and the laying begins immediately afterwards, and continues until autumn; in the spring as many as 12,000 eggs may be laid in twenty-four days. Those laid at the commencement of fine weather all belong to the working sort, and hatch at the end of four days. The larvae acquire their perfect state in about twelve days, and the cells are then immediately fitted up for the reception of new eggs. The eggs for producing males are laid two months later, and those for the females immediately afterwards. This succession of generations forms so many distinct communities, which, when increased beyond a certain degree, leave the parent hive to found a new colony elsewhere. Thus three or four swarms sometimes leave a hive in a season. A good swarm is said to weigh at least three kilograms. Besides the common bee (Apis mellifica) there are the Apis fasciata, domesticated in Egypt, the Apis Ugustica, or Ligurian bee of Italy and Greece, introduced into England, etc.

The humble-bees, or bumble-bees, of which about forty species are found in Britain and over sixty in North America, belong to the genus Bombus, which is almost worldwide in its distribution. Of these species solitary females which have survived the winter commence constructing small nests when the weather begins to be warm enough; some of them going deep into the earth in dry banks, others preferring heaps of stone or gravel, and others choosing always some bed of dry moss. In the nest the bee collects a mass of pollen and in this lays some eggs. The cells in these nests are not the work of the old bee, but are formed by the young insects similarly to the cocoons of silk-worms; and when the perfect insect is released from them by the old bee, which gnaws off their tops, they are employed as honey-cups.

The humble-bees, however, do not store honey for the winter, those which survive until the cold weather leaving the nest and penetrating the earth, or taking up some other sheltered position, and remaining there until the spring. The first brood consists of workers, and successive broods are produced during the summer. The experiment of domesticating different kinds of wild bees has been tried with no satisfactory results. Some bees, from their manner of nesting, are known as 'mason bees,' 'carpenter bees,' and 'upholsterer bees.' Some of these bees (genus Osmia) cement particles of sand or gravel together with a viscid substance in forming their nests; others make burrows in wood. The leaf-cutter or upholsterer bee (genus Megachile) lines its burrow with bits of leaf cut out in regular shapes.
Research Bee

BEE MOTH

The bee moth (Galleria mellonella) is a moth of the family Pyralidae. It has a slender, brownish or ashen-coloured body and long legs. The larvae feed on the wax of honeybee combs, often destroying the honey and injuring the bee brood.
Research Bee Moth

BROOD

Brood is the collective noun for a group of chickens.
Research Brood

CABBAGE BUTTERFLY

Picture of Cabbage Butterfly

Cabbage Butterfly is a name often given to butterflies of the genus Pieris, but applied especially to Pieris brassicae, the Large White or Cabbage White form so common in gardens in summer. The eggs are laid on the under surface of the leaves of cabbage and other cruciferous plants, and hatch in about a fortnight giving rise to bluish-green larvae. These are exceedingly voracious and very destructive to the host plants. When fully fed the larvae quit the host plant and pupate on walls, trees etc. The autumn brood remains in the pupa stage until spring, and then hatching gives rise to the early butterflies, whose offspring form the butterflies of full summer. In fine seasons there may be three generations, the rate of development being dependant upon the weather.
Research Cabbage Butterfly

CYCLAS

Cyclas are a genus of minute bivalve molluscs, the members of which are common in rivers. They have a special brood chamber at the base of the gills in which the young are reared.
Research Cyclas

HEART AND DART

The Heart and Dart (Agrotis exclamationis) is a moth of the family Noctuidae. It is one of the most common moths in the temperate and warmer parts of the Palaearctic, with a single brood flying from June to September.
Research Heart and Dart

OAK LEAF ROLLER

Picture of Oak Leaf Roller

The Oak Leaf Roller (Attelabus nitrens) is a species of Snout Beetle (Curculionidae) so named from its habit of making leafy containers for its brood. Despite its name, the Oak Leaf Roller also lives on other trees as well as oaks.
Research Oak Leaf Roller

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