housefly
English
Etymology
From house + fly. Cognate with Dutch huisvlieg (“housefly”), Danish husflue (“housefly”), Swedish husfluga (“housefly”).
Noun
housefly (plural houseflies)
- Any fly regularly found in human dwellings.
- The common housefly, Musca domestica, that frequents most homes and spreads some diseases.
- 1990, D. C. Kaslow, S. Welburn, 16: Insect-transmitted pathogens in the insect midgut, M. Lehane, P. Billingsley (editors), Biology of the Insect Midgut, page 454,
- Of the three potential means (carriage on the body and legs, regurgitation and defecation) by which houseflies can transmit pathogens, one involves passage through the gut. During passage through the housefly, pathogens may replicate within the gut.
- 2004, R. Jurenka, Insect Pheromone Biosynthesis, Stefan Schulz (editor), The Chemistry of Pheromones and Other Semiochemicals I, page 123,
- In the housefly, M. domestica, sex pheromone production is correlated with egg development.
- 2011, Ross Piper, Pests: A Guide to the World's Most Maligned, Yet Misunderstood Creatures, page 102,
- Houseflies are known to carry at least 100 different pathogens and they are vectors for at least 65 of these.
- 1990, D. C. Kaslow, S. Welburn, 16: Insect-transmitted pathogens in the insect midgut, M. Lehane, P. Billingsley (editors), Biology of the Insect Midgut, page 454,
- The common housefly, Musca domestica, that frequents most homes and spreads some diseases.
Translations
fly
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