Wasp

ahd-5
  • noun. Any of numerous social or solitary hymenopterans of the suborder Apocrita, especially of the family Vespidae, that characteristically have a slender hairless body with a constricted abdomen, two pairs of membranous wings, a mouth adapted for biting or sucking, and in the females an ovipositor sometimes modified as a sting.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. Any one of several families, many genera, and very numerous species of aculeate hymenopterous insects, whose wings fold lengthwise in a peculiar manner when the insects rest, which insects are hence collectively called Diploptera.
  • noun. Figuratively, a person characterized by ill nature, petulance, peevishness, irritability, or petty malignity.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • noun. Any one of numerous species of stinging hymenopterous insects, esp. any of the numerous species of the genus Vespa, which includes the true, or social, wasps, some of which are called yellow jackets.
  • noun. any one of numerous species of solitary wasps that make their nests in burrows which they dig in the ground, as the sand wasps. See Sand wasp, under Sand.
  • noun. See under Mud.
  • noun. See under Potter.
  • noun. a species of fly resembling a wasp, but without a sting.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • noun. A member of the dominant American upper-class culture, a white Anglo-Saxon Protestant.
  • noun. Any of many types of stinging flying insect resembling a hornet or bee.
  • noun. A person who behaves in an angry or insolent way, hence waspish.
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • noun. social or solitary hymenopterans typically having a slender body with the abdomen attached by a narrow stalk and having a formidable sting
  • noun. a white person of Anglo-Saxon ancestry who belongs to a Protestant denomination
  • Word Usage
    "The omitted chapter introduced a wasp, in the character of a judge or barrister, I suppose, since Mr. Tenniel wrote that "a _wasp_ in a _wig_ is altogether beyond the appliances of art.""
    cross-reference
    Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    Hyponym
    Words that are more specific
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts
    adder  ant  bee  beetle  bumblebee