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Queen's subject
Answer for the clue "Queen's subject ", 8 letters:
honeybee
Alternative clues for the word honeybee
Usage examples of honeybee.
Swarms of ferocious honeybees that have been known to kill both humans and animals are moving toward the United States from Brazil at the rate of 200 miles a There seems to be no natural barrier to block the bees, and they could be in North America within four to six years, says a study financed by the Agriculture Department.
Like most farmers, Harry knew that her best friends apart from the domesticated animals were owls, blacksnakes, bats, honeybees, praying mantises, most spiders, swallowtails, and purple martins.
While the capsules still floated high above the ground, small openings ejected newly revived impregnated queens of the honeybee, the Asian carpenter bee, and the bumblebee, as well as fireflies, caddis flies, nonbiting midges, cockroaches, and lac bugs.
One got caught between my belly and my belt, stinging me over and over, something bumblebees can do that honeybees can’t.
But here they were just one of a varit insects, like the butterflies flicking their bright colors in a qu dance across the tops of the fescue, and the harmless drone fly resembled a stinging honeybee, hovering over a buttercup.
The chapter he now chose to read was all about wild honeybees, and he entertained his listeners with sound effects: Bzzzzzzz.
From what I've learned of honeybees, that might have antagonized them.
And remember for five of those Honeybees, she’ll always be available, even on her wedding day.
Shackled, walking through the perfumed things honeybees love, Paul D hears the men talking and for the first time learns his worth.
I knew it wasn’t true, and not only because honeybees probably didn’t live longer than a single year (except maybe for the queens.
It couldn’t be true, because honeybees died when they stung, and even at nine I knew it.
Janie dutifully joined the queue, but when the corridor opened into a vast sunlit atrium she strode off on her own, leaving the children and teachers to gape at monarchs in butterfly cages and an interactive display of honeybees dancing.
Even some insects have been domesticated, notably Eurasia's honeybee and China's silkworm moth, kept for honey and silk, respectively.