|
BROODED |
Hatched |
|
COOKED UP |
Hatched (scheme) (6,2) |
|
HALF-HATCHED |
Imperfectly hatched; as, half-hatched eggs. |
|
NESTLING |
Newly hatched; being yet in the nest. |
|
|
DASYPAEDES |
Those birds whose young are covered with down when
hatched. |
|
FLOCCULENT |
Applied to the down of newly hatched or unfledged
birds. |
|
PEEP |
To cry, as a chicken hatching or newly hatched; to chirp;
to cheep. |
|
GYMNOPAEDIC |
Having young that are naked when hatched; psilopaedic;
-- said of certain birds. |
|
|
BROOD |
The young birds hatched at one time; a hatch; as, a brood
of chickens. |
|
AUTOPHAGI |
Birds which are able to run about and obtain their
own food as soon as hatched. |
|
INCUBATOR |
That which incubates, especially, an apparatus by means
of which eggs are hatched by artificial heat. |
|
OOSTEGITE |
One of the plates which in some Crustacea inclose a
cavity wherein the eggs are hatched. |
|
PRAECOCES |
A division of birds including those whose young are
able to run about when first hatched. |
|
VIRGIN |
A female insect producing eggs from which young are
hatched, though there has been no fecundation by a male; a
parthenogenetic insect. |
|
HATCH |
To produce, as young, from an egg or eggs by incubation,
or by artificial heat; to produce young from (eggs); as, the young when
hatched. |
|
BEEFEATER |
An African bird of the genus Buphaga, which feeds on the
larvae of botflies hatched under the skin of oxen, antelopes, etc. Two
species are known. |
|
OVIPAROUS |
Producing young from rggs; as, an oviparous animal, in
which the egg is generally separated from the animal, and hatched after
exclusion; -- opposed to viviparous. |
|
NEST |
Hence: the place in which the eggs of other animals, as
insects, turtles, etc., are laid and hatched; a snug place in which
young animals are reared. |
|
OVIFEROUS |
Egg-bearing; -- applied particularly to certain
receptacles, as in Crustacea, that retain the eggs after they have been
excluded from the formative organs, until they are hatched. |
|
PELECOID |
A figure, somewhat hatched-shaped, bounded by a
semicircle and two inverted quadrants, and equal in area to the square
ABCD inclosed by the chords of the four quadrants. |
|
ALTRICES |
Nursers, -- a term applied to those birds whose young
are hatched in a very immature and helpless condition, so as to require
the care of their parents for some time; -- opposed to praecoces. |
|
FOSSORES |
...nd
wasps. They excavate cells in earth, where they deposit their eggs,
with the bodies of other insects for the food of the young when
hatche... |
|
MYRIAPODA |
... those of true insects. The larvae, when
first hatched, often have but three pairs of legs. See Centiped,
Galleyworm, Milliped. ... |
|
CROCODILE |
..., and America. The eggs, laid
in the sand, are hatched by the sun's heat. The best known species is
that of the Nile (C. vulgaris, or C. Nilotic... |