"Ladybird" is a dialect variant of "ladybug." Both mean "Our Lady's bug/bird" and are one of the standard examples of a modern derivative of Old English feminine nouns without -s in the possessive. Presumably, then, a baby ladybird would be a larva or a pupa.
In French, a "ladybird" would rather be called a "coccinelle". But I guess here the child probably mistook the ladybird for a firebug. A "firebug" is nicknamed "Gendarme" in French. Both insects look somehow similar, so one can understand the child might have got confused.
A baby sloth is simply called a baby sloth.
A baby Rhinoceros is called a 'Calf'...
A baby wasp is called a larva. =]
The baby of a donkey is called a foal just like a horse baby is called. If it is a male foal of a donkey it is called a jack and if it is a female it is called a jennet or jenny.
because the ladybird live in a tree to worm her baby's or to get worm in her house
Ladybird, or as we call it in the US, ladybug, in French is coccinelle.
you should take the ladybird inside and treat it like your baby. then get him a brother to play with
Halmus chalybeus, commonly known as the steelblue ladybird
A Ladybird does not kill
They have an exoskeleton rather than an endoskeleton like mammalia or reptilia
The red and black beetle is called a ladybird beetle.
A. Yes, a ladybird is a herbivore
The Ladybird was created in 1923.
The Ladybugs other name is ladybird Bettle.
The ladybird or ladybug actually is a family of species, called Coccinellidae. If you want the scientific name a specific ladybug, count the spots, because a species normally has a specific amount of spots.
They are both predators and can be picked on by other animals