Search references for CYDAMUS BUG. Phrases containing CYDAMUS BUG
See searches and references containing CYDAMUS BUG!CYDAMUS BUG
Genus of true bugs
the genus Cydamus: Cydamus abditus Van Duzee, 1925 i c g Cydamus adspersipes Stål, 1860 i c g Cydamus bolivianus Kormilev, 1953 c g Cydamus borealis Distant
Cydamus_(bug)
Species of true bug
System. Retrieved 2019-09-23. "Cydamus borealis". GBIF. Retrieved 2019-09-23. "Cydamus borealis species Information". BugGuide.net. Retrieved 2019-09-23
Cydamus_borealis
Family of true bugs
Breddin, 1901 Camptopus Amyot & Serville, 1843 Cosmoleptus Stål, 1873 Cydamus Stål, 1860 Daclera Signoret, 1863 Darmistus Stål, 1859 Dulichius Stål,
Alydidae
Subfamily of true bugs
Breddin, 1901 Bactrophyamixia Brailovsky, 1991 Calamocoris Breddin, 1901 Cydamus Stål, 1860 Darmistus Stål, 1860 Dulichius Stål, 1866 Esperanza Barber,
Micrelytrinae
Extinct Romance language of North Africa
Western Romance, Sardinian and certain Lucanian dialects. Examples include Cydamus > Ghadames, Gergis > Zarzis, Ad Badias > Bades, (Ta)capis > Gabes, Aelias
African_Romance
†Cyclotrachelus †Cyclotrachelus tenebricus – type locality for species †Cydamus †Cydamus robustus – type locality for species †Cydnopsis †Cydnopsis handlirschi
List of the Cenozoic life of Colorado
List_of_the_Cenozoic_life_of_Colorado
CYDAMUS BUG
CYDAMUS BUG
Girl/Female
British, English
Cute
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of several places called Bowden or Bowdon. Bowden in Devon and Derbyshire and Bowdon in Cheshire are named with Old English boga ‘bow’ + dūn ‘hill’, i.e. ‘hill shaped like a bow’; one in Leicestershire (Bugedone in Domesday Book) comes, according to Ekwall, from the Old English personal name Būga (masculine) or Bucge (feminine) + dūn. There are also Scottish places of this name, but there are comparatively few bearers of the surname Bowden north of the border.English : habitational name from Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, so named with the Old English phrase būfan dūne ‘on, upon the hill’. The surname may also have arisen as a topographic name from the same phrase used independently, for someone who lived at the top of a hill.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Buadáin ‘descendant of Buadán’, an Old Irish personal name.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Bugby, a Northamptonshire variant of Buckby (see Buckbee).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English boggish ‘boastful’, ‘haughty’ (a word of unknown origin, perhaps akin to Germanic bag and bug, with the literal meaning ‘swollen’, ‘puffed up’). The name (in the forms Boge(y)s, Boga(y)s) is found in the 12th century in Yorkshire and East Anglia, and also around Bordeaux, which had trading links with East Anglia.
Girl/Female
Greek
Lover of Pyramus.
Girl/Female
Greek
Daughter of Cadmus.
Boy/Male
Shakespearean Greek
A Midsummer Night's Dream' Bottom, a weaver, acts as Pyramus in the play within the play.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : of uncertain derivation. Reaney suggests it may be from Middle English bugee, buggye ‘lambskin’, and hence probably a metonymic occupational name for someone who prepared such skins.
Boy/Male
Arabic
Bug
Female
Greek
(ΣεμÎλη) Greek name SEMELE means "of the earth (or underworld)." In mythology, this is the name of a daughter of Kadmos (Latin Cadmus), the mortal mother of Dionysos. Also known as Thyone.
Surname or Lastname
Scandinavian
Scandinavian : habitational name from a place so named in Denmark.Scandinavian : from the old Danish personal names Buggi or Bukki, short forms of various German compound names.English : variant spelling of Bugg.
Surname or Lastname
Catalan
Catalan : nickname for a bald man, equivalent to Spanish Cabello.English : variant spelling of Cable.Possibly a respelling of German Göbel (see Goebel) or Kabel.William Cabell, of Bugley near Warminster, in Wiltshire, England, trained in surgery and migrated to Virginia in the 18th century. The emigrant ancestor of a distinguished VA family, he married in 1726 and by 1741 had carried settlements 50 miles westward. As a pioneer during VA’s westward push, the surgeon had a private hospital from which he handed out medicines and wooden legs crafted by his artisans.
Boy/Male
Shakespearean
A Midsummer Night's Dream' Bottom, a weaver, acts as Pyramus in the play within the play.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Bugg.
Surname or Lastname
English (Bedfordshire)
English (Bedfordshire) : nickname for someone disfigured by a lump or hump, from a diminutive of Old French bugne ‘swelling’, ‘protuberance’. The term bugnon was also applied to a kind of puffed-up fruit tart, and so the surname may also have been a metonymic occupational name for a baker of these.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for an uncouth or weird man, from Middle English bugge ‘hobgoblin’, ‘scarecrow’ (perhaps from Welsh bwg ‘ghost’). Compare Bogle 1.
Boy/Male
Greek Latin
He who excels; from the east.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Devon and Cornwall)
English (mainly Devon and Cornwall) : nickname from Norman French buge ‘mouth’ (Late Latin bucca), applied either to someone with a large or misshapen mouth or to someone who made excessive use of his mouth, i.e. a garrulous, indiscreet, or gluttonous person. The word is also recorded in Middle English in the sense ‘victuals supplied for retainers on a military campaign’, and the surname may therefore also have arisen as a metonymic occupational name for a medieval quartermaster.Scottish (Caithness and Orkney) : unexplained.
Surname or Lastname
English (East Anglia)
English (East Anglia) : nickname from Middle English wigge ‘beetle’, ‘bug’.English (East Anglia) : metonymic occupational name for a maker of fancy breads baked in rounds and then divided up into wedge-shaped slices, Middle English wigge, from Middle Dutch wigge ‘wedge(-shaped cake)’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name, common in Lancashire and Yorkshire, from Buglawton or Church Lawton in Cheshire, or Lawton in Herefordshire, named in Old English as ‘settlement on or near a hill’, or ‘settlement by a burial mound’, from hlÄw ‘hill’, ‘burial mound’ + tÅ«n ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’.English : variant spelling of Laughton.
CYDAMUS BUG
CYDAMUS BUG
Girl/Female
Arabic
She-camel
Male
Egyptian
, a son of Rameses III.
Girl/Female
Scottish
Serves Lawrence.
Girl/Female
American, Australian, Chinese, Christian, Hebrew
Plain
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Dutch, English, French, German, Irish, Latin, Swedish, Swiss
Blind; From the Latin Cecilia; Sixth
Girl/Female
Greek
Loved by God.
Boy/Male
Indian
Obeyed, Pure or like a Pearl
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Carlisle.
Surname or Lastname
English, French, and Dutch
English, French, and Dutch : from the Latin personal name Clemens meaning ‘merciful’ (genitive Clementis). This achieved popularity firstly through having been borne by an early saint who was a disciple of St. Paul, and later because it was selected as a symbolic name by a number of early popes. There has also been some confusion with the personal name Clemence (Latin Clementia, meaning ‘mercy’, an abstract noun derived from the adjective; in part a masculine name from Latin Clementius, a later derivative of Clemens). As an American family name, Clement has absorbed cognates in other continental European languages. (For forms, see Hanks and Hodges 1988.)
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name from Middle English stebbing, stubbing ‘clearing’ (from an unattested Old English stybbing, a derivative of stubb ‘tree stump’).English : habitational name from Stebbing in Essex, which is named in Old English either as ‘the family or followers (Old English -ingas) of a man called Stybba’, an unattested Old English personal name, or ‘the dwellers among the tree stumps (Old English stybb)’.English : Edward Stebbins was one of the founders of Hartford, CT (coming from Cambridge, MA, with Thomas Hooker) in 1635.
CYDAMUS BUG
CYDAMUS BUG
CYDAMUS BUG
CYDAMUS BUG
CYDAMUS BUG
n.
A species of Acorus (A. calamus), commonly called calamus, or sweet flag. The root has a pungent, aromatic taste, and is used in medicine as a stomachic; the leaves have an aromatic odor, and were formerly used instead of rushes to strew on floors.
n.
Either one of the two apertures in the calamus of a feather.
n.
One of the long slender flexible stems of several species of palms of the genus Calamus, mostly East Indian, though some are African and Australian. They are exceedingly tough, and are used for walking sticks, wickerwork, chairs and seats of chairs, cords and cordage, and many other purposes.
n.
A name given to several peculiar palms, species of Calamus and Daemanorops, having very long, smooth flexible stems, commonly called rattans.
n.
The horny basal portion of a feather; the barrel or quill.
n.
An East Indian carnivore (Mydaus meliceps) allied to the badger, and noted for the very offensive odor that it emits, somewhat resembling that of a skunk. It is a native of the high mountains of Java and Sumatra, and has long, silky fur. Called also stinking badger, and stinkard.
n.
See Camis.
n.
The indian cane, a plant of the Palm family. It furnishes the common rattan. See Rattan, and Dragon's blood.
n.
The teledu.
n.
A conspicuous wild flower (Centaurea Cyanus), growing in grainfields.
pl.
of Calamus
a.
Of or pertaining to Cadmus, a fabulous prince of Thebes, who was said to have introduced into Greece the sixteen simple letters of the alphabet -- /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /, /. These are called Cadmean letters.
n.
A daughter of Cadmus, and by Zeus mother of Bacchus.
n.
A plant (Centaurea cyanus) which grows in grain fields. It receives its name from its blue bottle-shaped flowers.
n.
A large genus of composite plants, related to the thistles and including the cornflower or bluebottle (Centaurea Cyanus) and the star thistle (C. Calcitrapa).
n. pl.
A division of amphipod Crustacea, in which the abdomen is small or rudimentary and the legs are often reduced to five pairs. The whale louse, or Cyamus, and Caprella are examples.
a.
A name given to several different species of plants having blue flowers, as the Houstonia coerulea, the Centaurea cyanus or bluebottle, and the Vaccinium angustifolium.