Larva vs Wireworm - What's the difference?
larva | wireworm |
An early stage of growth for some insects and amphibians, in which after hatching from their egg, insects are wingless and resemble a caterpillar or grub, and amphibians lack limbs and resemble fish.
An animal in the aforementioned stage.
A form of a recently born or hatched animal that is quite different from its adult stage.
The larva of the click beetle.
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=February 6, author=Veronica Heath, title=Country diary, work=The Guardian
, passage=A farmer tells me that moles can be beneficial because they eat a lot of wireworms and other pests, not just earthworms. }}
As nouns the difference between larva and wireworm
is that larva is an early stage of growth for some insects and amphibians, in which after hatching from their egg, insects are wingless and resemble a caterpillar or grub, and amphibians lack limbs and resemble fish while wireworm is the larva of the click beetle.larva
English
(wikipedia larva)Noun
Usage notes
Although the plural (larvas) is somewhat common, it is regarded by some as incorrect.Anagrams
* English nouns with irregular plurals ----wireworm
English
Noun
(en noun)citation