musca domestica

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musca domestica

A common musca domestica lands on a piece of ripe fruit.

Definition

Noun 1. The common housefly: A small, two-winged insect (Musca domestica) of the family Muscidae, typically having a gray body with four dark stripes on the thorax. It is a cosmopolitan species commonly found in and around human dwellings and is known to be a carrier of numerous pathogens.

Usage
  • The term musca domestica is the scientific (Latin) name for the common housefly. It is used in formal, academic, or technical contexts such as entomology, public health, and biology.
  • In everyday English, the common name "housefly" is almost always used instead.
Examples
  • Scientific Context: "The study focused on the pathogen transmission mechanisms of ."
  • General Context (using the common name implied by the definition): "The housefly is a significant vector for diseases like typhoid and cholera."
Advanced Usage
  • The name can be used in binomial nomenclature to specify this exact species, distinguishing it from other types of flies (e.g., , the face fly).
Variants and Related Words
  • Housefly (n): The common English name for .
  • Fly (n): The general term for insects of the order Diptera, which includes .
Synonyms
  • Housefly
  • Common fly
Related Phrases/Idioms
  • No idioms directly use "musca domestica." Idioms use the common name "fly," such as:
    • Fly in the ointment: A minor annoyance that spoils something.
    • Wouldn't hurt a fly: Describes a very gentle person.
musca domestica

A common musca domestica lands on a piece of ripe fruit.

Noun
  1. common fly that frequents human habitations and spreads many diseases