I depends on how they mention it
not in the Chicago area.
Grasshopper nothing- cricket is luck.
A grasshopper is a general term for many species of grasshoppers.in fact there are 11,000 valid species of grasshopper!
If you literally mean to have a grasshopper, then it would be: Tener una saltamontes. You would have to conjugate Tener to whoever has the grasshopper.
"Grasshopper"
Grasshopper
It means you are an apprentice. This is a reference to an old Kung Fu movie where the trainer called his apprentice "grasshopper". The original reference is to an old Chinese proverb about the ant and the grasshopper. The ant worked hard and prepared for winter, the grasshopper laughed at the ant and played. Winter came and the ant was warm and well fed, the grasshopper died. The teacher was trying to tell the student that he should be the ant but was acting like the grasshopper.
After someone's grasshopper got old they then referred to its earlier existence as the young grasshopper. It just kind of stuck. Basically any grasshopper that isn't old is a young grasshopper. A middle aged grasshopper probably would not be called a young grasshopper but merely just a "grasshopper". I never heard of that. Instead it refer's to the Kung Fu TV series where the main character was being taught his Kung Fu skills, as a child, his mentor (with flashbacks in the TV show) would call him YOUNG GRASSHOPPER. You most often heard "Have patience Young Grasshopper".
There is not significant meaning to having or seeing a grasshopper, though some might interpret it to mean something.
Do you mean 'batta (バッタ)' perhaps? Batta is the general word used for grasshopper.
What des it mean in chinese when a grasshopper comes in your house?
The term for the grasshopper-like insects is pronounced (Sih-KAY-duhz)