The phrase is spelled, "W-A-N-N-A-B-E" with no spacing and no extra E. A Wannabe is someone that wants to be someone or something else. It is a derogatory comment, a put down. Example: She acts like a movie star wannabe.
A QUEEN BEE is the head of the hive! Basically, she gives birth to the hive's bee-babies and all the worker bees keep her alive and protect her.
If you meant the terms used by Rosalind Wiseman to describe teen society in her book 'Queen Bees and Wannabes' (this is a play on words, so, yeah...), then Queen Bees would be the popular teens, while Wannabes would simply mean people who WANT TO BE like them.
PS--of course you CAN spell it wanna bees in order to illustrate the pun.
Queen bees are female bees responsible for reproduction in a hive. Worker bees, also known as "wannabees," are female bees that perform various tasks such as foraging, nursing the young, and building the hive. The term "wannabees" is not commonly used in scientific literature and is more of a whimsical term to refer to the workers who aspire to become queens.
you have to exterminate the working bees to get to the queen bees
Queen bees are not poisonous.
Queen bees only sting other queen bees.
No, all queen bees are female, as are all worker bees. The male bees are called drones.
Bees kill their queen because their queen might be to old or the queen might have a diesease
Bracknell Queen Bees was created in 1987.
WASPS AND OTHER bees and queen bees
Queen bees have the same ability to sting as worker bees. The big difference is that the queen's sting is smooth, so she can withdraw it easily.
No, queen bees are usually the same colour as the rest of the colony.
The queen bees do not do work, besides laying eggs.
Queen bees rule the hive.
yes