No. A phenom is an enormously successful person and when that phrase replaces phenom in the question, it makes no sense.
The myth about bees not being able to fly because their body is too heavy for their wings is not true. Bees can fly due to the unique flapping motion of their wings, which creates lift and allows them to stay airborne. This motion is different from the way airplanes or birds fly.
The words weight, fly and sand have "fly" in common, because together they can form other words. Their direct relationship is: fly, fly weight, and sand fly.
A house fly can fly at an average speed of about 4.5 mph.
No, a fly would not be able to fly in a vacuum because it relies on air resistance and pressure to generate lift and maneuver in the air. In a vacuum, there would be no air molecules for the fly to interact with, so it would not be able to fly.
When you get the fly swat out, the fly may sense the sudden movement or change in the environment and decided to fly away to avoid the potential threat. Flies have quick reflexes and are sensitive to changes in their surroundings, allowing them to escape harm.
Hydrogen alone is a gas and cannot fly. However, hydrogen gas can be used as a lifting gas in balloons or airships, which enables them to fly.
A bee fly is a member of the fly family Bombyliidae, with adults which look like bumblebees.
Ant, bee, fly, bug.
ANSWER It is probally a bee fly
bee
no
Sounds like a bee-fly. May prey on local mason bees...bad, bad, bad bee-fly!
yes
a beeterfly
What happened to the bee when it rained? He had to fly with his yellow jackets, of course.
The Green Bee Eater can fly upside down.
The alphabet B (as in 'bee')
A ghost in the rain is like a bee because they both fly.