Yes, if the bed is in an area infected with bedbugs you can and most likely will be bitten by bedbugs. You could also end up infecting your own home if they lay eggs on your clothing or if one hitches a ride with you when you go home.
A bee cannot be like a bed. A bee is a bug and a bed is something you lay on.
Bed bugs do not live on humans, they live with humans. This being said, it is extremely unlikely that a bed bug would lay eggs on your body.
YES and you should get it checked out ABSOLUTELY NOT! Bed bugs lay eggs in crevices and dark, rough places.
No. Bed bugs and scabies are two total different things. You can get scabies by close skin contact from someone that has scabies. Scabies burrow under your skin and lay their eggs while bed bugs stay and hide in your bed and suck your blood at night.
Bed bugs do not go after certain blood types. Any mammal with blood is an equal opportunity feeding banquet. Yes, that includes your pets, though they probably prefer a less hairy human. According to the Mayo Clinic, bed bugs need a blood meal to molt and their life cycle includes 5 molts. 5 bites may not seem too bad, however, the bed bug has about 200,000 brothers and sisters that need a meal...that's 1,000,000 bites! The female will lay close to 200,000 eggs per 10 month life cycle, so one can see how easily it can get out of hand.
lay bug.
It is proper grammar to say "lie on the bed" when referring to resting on the bed in a horizontal position without an object. "Lay" requires a direct object, so you would say "lay the book on the bed" when placing something on the bed.
He was laid on the bed.
there is no such bug
Bug is not a medical term. "Bug" can be a lay term meaning germ (parasite, bacterium, or virus).
River bed rocks
Proffesional extirminator here. Based on passed expierence i have found many bed bugs in my pubic area. I have aqquired a thermometer and found that my pubic region is 26 degeres centigrade. Based on past expierence if a bed bug infestation is left untreated then the bug may enter your ear canal and actually chew through your perpicopula which is the main seal around your eardrum. once into your skull the bed bugls multiply and lay eggs in your brain.