larva
"Alate" means "possessing wings". It is also a noun, a winged, reproductive form of a variety of social insects.
About 10% of insects go through an incomplete metamorphosis. They do not have a pupa form -- these include dragonflies, grasshoppers and cockroaches.These insects have three stages in their life cycle:egg: unborn stage.larva: young stage -- this is when most of the feeding is done.adult: final, breeding stage - including wings.
It's helpful to keep in mind that this is metaphor, operating on the basis that "wings" will elevate people or ideas to their greater potential. So, love is an elevated form of friendship because it has wings. Again, not actual wings, but symbolic ones.
My son, when he gets me angry. Nothing can 'fly' without wings, some things (like a ball) can stay in the air, though. Without a form of wings nothing can stay in the air (except for a balloon, which goes up).
Nymphs are a juvenile form of insects that undergo hemimetabolous, or gradual metamorphosis. Nymphs are like "mini-adults" and resemble their adult form. Many winged insects have aquatic nymph young with wing buds. The nymph undergoes successive instars (periods of growth) and molts. Winged insects do not have fully developed wings until after the final molt. Hemimetabolous insects include grasshoppers, cicadas, and mantids which have terrestrial young; and mayflies, stoneflies, and dragonflies which have aquatic young.Larvae are a juvenile form of insects that undergo holometabolous, or complete metamorphosis. The wormlike larvae do not resemble their adult form. After several instars, larva enter a transitional stage called a pupa. Pupae are usually enclosed in a case, and are inactive and nonfeeding. During the final molt, the adult emerges from the pupa. Larvae are commonly known as caterpillars, maggots, bagworms, fuzzy worms, and grubs.
wings
The plural possessive noun would be written as the butterflies' wings.
No. Wings is a plural noun, or a verb form (to wing). The word "winged" can be an adjective meaning having wings.
If the animal is a bird, then it has wings.
Larva for holometabolous insects (form a cocoon and change form completely), nymph for hemimetabolous ones (just grow bigger and get wings as they grow, don't change form altogether). Separate, more familiar names also exist; caterpillars are butterfly larvae, maggots are fly larvae, grubs are beetle larvae, and so on.
The possessive form of the noun bird is bird's.example: We sat quietly and listened to a bird's call.
No, both 'birds' and 'wings' are nouns, the plural form of the nouns 'bird' and 'wing'.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the nouns 'birds' or 'wings' are they as a subject, and them as an object in a sentence.If you are trying to say 'the wings of the bird', then the noun 'bird' must be in the possessive form to show that the wings belong to the bird: the bird's wings.Or, if you mean 'the wings of the birds', you need the plural possessive form for the plural noun birds: the birds' wings.