Humans don't feed the larvae, the adult bees do. If the bees don't have enough nectar or honey stores humans will give them something like sugar syrup
The honey bee cycle is: egg, larva, pupa, adult bee - so the larva hatches from the egg, not the adult bee. The larva hatches from the egg after about three days.
A baby bee is a bee larva.
A bee's egg hatches into a larva. This evenually turns into a pupa, from which an adult bee will emerge.
Larva
The nurse bee is the bee that feeds the larva for the first 6 days of its life.
Larva is one of the stages of development of a bee, equivalent to a grub or caterpiller. You don't normally see them because they never leave the brood cell.
Queen bee
As a larva, yes, as an adult, no.
larva,pupa,bee
The Queen bee lays all the eggs. Each egg hatches, and a little worm-like larva crawls out. The worker bees feed pollen and honey to the baby larva. Soon, it spins a little web blanket inside the cell and becomes a pupa. After 16 to 24 days, a full grown bee climbs out of the cell.
Like other insects, bees go through four stages in their life: # Egg # Larva # Pupa # Adult
In a hexagonal cell within the colony.