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FLY FLY

Volume 7 · 119 words · 1797 Edition

FLY, in zoology, a large order of insects, the distinguishing characteristic of which is, that their wings are transparent. By this they are distinguished from beetles, butterflies, grasshoppers, &c.

Flies are subdivided into those which have four, and those which have two wings.

Of those with four wings there are several genera or kinds; as the ant, apis, ichneumon, &c. See API, FORMICA, &c.

Of those with two wings, there are likewise several kinds, as the gad-fly, gnat, &c. See GAD-Fly, &c.

Those who desire a more particular account of the anatomy, generation, structure, and manifold subdivisions of flies, may consult Reaumer's History of Insects, tom. 4. See also Entomology.

House-Fly. See Musca.

Pelluculent Fly. See Ethiopia, no. 11.