6 legs
a head, thorax, and abdomen (in its adult form)
an exoskeleton
of the Class insecta
Type your answer here... john bobs
A butterfly is an insect of the order Lepidoptera.
An insect is a type of animal. Any structure on an insect is, by definition, a structure on an animal.
An insect. No, a tick comes from the order of Arachnida. It has too many legs to be an insect - it has 8, four on each side of its body and no antennae.
Isopoda.[A woodlouse in NOT an insect]
It is correct to say an animal and an insect.
Caterpillars are the larval form of the insect order including butterflies and moths
On every third birthday, an animal is considered to be an insect.
Moth is an insect under order Lepidoptera like butterflies, And yes it comes under kingdom Animalia so its an ''animal''
insects must have an outer skeleton, six legs, three parts to their body, have bilateral symmetry, and antennae.
An insect order for a butterfly is Lepidoptera.
An animal (insect) with an exoskeleton still grows under its exoskeleton like any other animal (insect). The exoskeleton is like a suit of armor, when the animal (insect) grows to big to fit inside its exoskeleton it sheds it, and a newer exoskeleton will grow to fit the animal (insect).
This question is far too general. Insect bites and animal bites are different.