Its a reaction to when they feel threatened
Granddaddy longlegs mainly eat decomposing plant material such as dead leaves, fungi, and moss. They are important detritivores that help break down organic matter and recycle nutrients in the ecosystem. Despite the common myth, they do not have venom glands or fangs to bite humans.
Granddaddy longlegs, also known as harvestmen, are omnivorous scavengers that feed on a variety of organic matter such as dead insects, decaying plant material, and small invertebrates. They do not have fangs, so they rely on their small mouthparts to suck up liquid food. They have a unique feeding behavior of regurgitating digestive fluids onto their food and then re-ingesting the liquefied food.
That depends. For the most part, it doesn't matter, but if you are directly addressing a daddy-longleg, you must capitalize it. A Daddy Longlegs is a particular thing, so that would make it a proper noun.
The granddaddy of the Internet is considered to be ARPANET, which was the first network to implement the TCP/IP protocol suite. Developed in the 1960s by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), ARPANET laid the foundation for what would later evolve into the modern Internet.
Either six or eight. There are at least three different little beasts called Daddy longlegs. - Cranefly (Insect, 6 legs) - Harvestman ('Harvestman', 8 legs) - Cellar Spider (Spider, 8 legs)
Granddaddy longlegs mainly eat decomposing plant material such as dead leaves, fungi, and moss. They are important detritivores that help break down organic matter and recycle nutrients in the ecosystem. Despite the common myth, they do not have venom glands or fangs to bite humans.
Granddaddy longlegs, also known as harvestmen, are omnivorous scavengers that feed on a variety of organic matter such as dead insects, decaying plant material, and small invertebrates. They do not have fangs, so they rely on their small mouthparts to suck up liquid food. They have a unique feeding behavior of regurgitating digestive fluids onto their food and then re-ingesting the liquefied food.
The plural is simply 'Daddy longlegs', ie, "I saw two daddy longlegs this morning."
It is capitalized at the beginning of the sentence or when it forms part of the proper noun or when it precedes a person's name or when it is used as a direct address. Examples: Granddaddy Ted Are you home, Granddaddy?
Daddy Longlegs - album - was created in 2005.
Granddaddy Flow was created on 2003-05-28.
No, they are real. "Daddy Longlegs" or "dandy longlegs" are actually called crane flies. They are long, slender, flying insects with long legs. The "daddy longlegs" or "dandy longlegs" is a nickname for the crane fly. Other nicknames include mosquito hawk, mosquito eater, gallinipper, mayfly, gollywhomper and whapper. The nickname varies depending on country.
the scientific name for a granddaddy long leg spider is pholcidae
Granddaddy's Granddaughter - 1914 was released on: USA: 3 April 1914
Granddaddy's Boy - 1913 was released on: USA: 4 December 1913
black
No. In Britain the expression daddy longlegs only refers to the cranefly - a non-poisonous insect.