Worm Meaning in English
word
/ˈwɝm/
wurm
/wˈɜːm/
wurm
التعريف
A worm is a small, long, soft animal with no legs. It often lives in soil, and some kinds can also live in the body and cause disease.
الاستخدام والفروق الدقيقة
Often used for creatures in soil or fishing bait: 'earthworm' is the common specific word. In everyday speech, 'worm' can also mean a parasitic worm in the body. Don't confuse it with 'caterpillar', which becomes a butterfly or moth.
Spanish: gusano - lombrizPortuguese (BR): verme - minhocaPortuguese (PT): verme - minhocaChinese (Simplified): 蠕虫 - 虫子(细长软体)Chinese (Traditional): 蠕蟲 - 蟲子(細長軟體)Hindi: कीड़ा - कृमि - केंचुआArabic: دودة - ديدان الأرضBengali: কৃমি - পোকা (মাটির/শরীরের)Russian: червь - глист (паразит)Japanese: ミミズ - 寄生虫 (身体の中にいる場合)Vietnamese: giunKorean: 벌레 - 지렁이Turkish: solucan - kurt (parazit)Urdu: کرمIndonesian: cacing
جمل نموذجية
The bird ate a worm from the ground.
basic
I found a worm in the garden.
basic
The doctor said the dog might have a worm.
basic
There was a worm in my apple, so I threw it away.
natural
He used a worm as bait when we went fishing.
natural
Ugh, don’t touch that — it looks like a worm.
natural