different between aphid vs aphicide
aphid
English
Etymology
New Latin aphides, coined by Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus in 1758. His inspiration for the name remains unclear. OED suggests a connection to Ancient Greek ??????? (apheid?s, “unsparing, lavishly borrowed”) in reference to the insects' voracity or rapid rate of production, from ?- (a-, “not”) + ???????? (pheídomai, “to spare, be thrifty, be merciful”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *b?eyd- (“to split”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?e?.f?d/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?e?.f?d/
Noun
aphid (plural aphids)
- Sapsucking pest insect of the superfamily Aphidoidea; an aphidian.
Translations
See also
- blackfly
- greenfly
- jumping plant louse
- whitefly
References
aphid From the web:
- what aphids
- what aphids look like
- what aphids do to plants
- what aphids eat
- what aphids do ladybugs eat
- what aphids provide ants
- what aphids attack lupins
aphicide
English
Etymology
aphid +? -cide
Noun
aphicide (plural aphicides)
- (agriculture) Any pesticide intended to kill aphids
Related terms
- aphicidal
Translations
French
Noun
aphicide m (plural aphicides)
- aphicide
aphicide From the web:
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