It sounds like the famous black widow spider. they can be poisonous but if you avoid them at all costs they wont bother you, they only bite if you poke at them and go near and annoy them !!
the black widow heh heh heh.....
a little spider black legs and yellow back with black spots
A garden orb weaver probably
From what I have been told, this sounds like an Orb Spider...which is in the Widow Family and is extremely venomous.
No
It could be a black widow spider if it is small and thin-legged with a shiny round black abdomen and red markings under it. If it's fuzzy with a red spot on it's back, and the front part of the body is more-or-less the same size as back part, then it's a black jumping spider.
a type of jumping spider?
The broad-faced sac spider is a black-headed, one- or two-inch (2.54- to 5.08-centimeter), white-bodied type of spider. The arachnid in question (Trachelas tranquillus) has a dark brown head that can look or photograph black and a grey abdomen that can look or photograph off-white. The female is bigger than the male, by anywhere from 0.08 - 0.2 inches (2 - 5 millimeters).
yes
Certain types of flies have a clear transparent abdomen. They also have clear wings and black spots on the body.
A "Black Widow" has a red hourglass shape on the underside of its abdomen, but it isn't impossible to spot a spider with the infamous red mark on its upper abdomen, that would make it a "Red-Back Widow," which is found only in Australia (unless something has gone horribly wrong!) If you don't live in Australia, it is most likely a "Northern Black Widow" which has several variations in the location and size of the red mark, usually small spots or the hourglass shape. If neither of these is the spider you're asking about, consider the hairy jumping spider, "Whitmani" The female is black or dark gray with a bright red abdomen
A black spotted yellow spider that just ate a gumball.