The egg of a louse is usually called louse eggs and attaches on the human hair.
The egg of a louse is called a nit. Nits are generally attached to hair strands close to the scalp and can be difficult to remove.
no.....they are the leftover egg from a louse
yes or no
Normally, 1 egg = 1 louse. Nature being nature, though, there are probably occasionally (very, very rarely) an egg with "twin lice" in it.
A nit is the egg of a louse and a louse is a parasite that lives off of a host ie. an animal or human. It feeds off of them.
Lice are parasitic insects. The life cycle of the head louse has three stages: nit, nymph, and adult. The life cycle of a single louse from egg to egg is about 1 month.
The egg of a louse is called a nit. Nits are small, oval-shaped structures that lice attach to the hair shaft close to the scalp. They are often mistaken for dandruff but are firmly attached to the hair and can be difficult to remove.
Yes, "snus" and "louse" rhyme. Both words end with a similar "ouse" sound.
Louse is already singular. The plural is lice.
yes a louse is a parasite! :)
the single insect is called a 'Louse' a Louse
woodlouses have an exoesquelet or in other words their bones are ''out side"