It dies
No. When a honeybee stings it dies.
A sting is what makes a honeybee harmful, but they won't sting unless they are provoked. Only female honeybees have stingers, are workers, and take up most of the population in the hive. But when a worker honeybee stings someone, it's fatal for them: After a worker bee stings someone, their stinger is deeply attached to the person; then when the honeybee tries to fly away, their abdomen gets torn out and it kills them.
What happens to a bee after it stings someone depends on whether it was able to pull the sting out of the victim. If it can, the bee will just fly away and no harm comes to it. By a cruel trick of evolution, a bee's sting is barbed, and animal flesh is elastic and tends to grip the sting so it is likely that as the bee tries to pull away the sting is pulled out from the bee's abdomen together with the venom sac and the muscles which pump the venom. The bee will then fly away, but its injuries are such that it will die from them somewhere between an hour and a day after.
Unless a person is allergic to bee stings and goes into anaphylactic shock, a bee sting won't kill them. Note that multiple bee stings can increase the risk of an allergic reaction though.
It dies.
In mainstream allopathic medicine, honeybee venom is used to treat people who are allergic to bee stings. A small amount of venom is injected during desensitization treatments to help patients develop a tolerance to stings.
The bee dies
it dies.
it will hurt heaps
that is impossible so nothing really
Japanese hornet. The honeybee can only sting once, and even if it did sting the hornet, which is also able to outfly the honeybee, it would die shortly afterward. Thus, the honeybee loses either way.
In homeopathic medicine, apis is used as a remedy for many symptoms similar to those of bee stings.