No
bee's eg the bee's wings - the wings of the (one) bee
"bees" is the plural of "bee." One bee, many bees.
To quote Shakespeare: "To bee or not to bee [social], that is the question."
No because he is a bee and he can't get stung from the other bees
bees live in colonies or groups. each colony has a queen bee and a drone bee and many worker bees. the queen bee lays eggs with the help of drone bee and the worker bees look after them.
Drone is the masculine name of a male bee. Female bees are the worker bees or the queen bee.
The plural form for the noun bee is bees.The plural possessive is bees'.Example: The bees' humming is a sound of summer.
Bees don't really have kings. A male bee is called a Drone, and it's job is to mate with the queen and then die. Queen bees can keep laying eggs for a long time after a single mating, so they don't really need males much.
Bees stay in bee hives.
Yes and no. A honey bee is a type of bee, it's a specific type.
The plural of bee is bees.
Bees: /bees/ Beehive: bee/hive