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Species of moth
Crambus daeckellus, or Daecke's pyralid moth, is a moth in the family Crambidae. It was described by Frank Haimbach in 1907. It is found in North America
Crambus_daeckellus
Genus of moths
1942 Crambus cyrnellus Schawerda, 1926 Crambus daeckellus Haimbach, 1907 Crambus damotellus Schaus, 1922 Crambus dedalus Bassi, 2000 Crambus delineatellus
Crambus
Species of moth
solutellus (Zeller, 1863) Synonyms Crambus solutellus Zeller, 1863 Thaumatopsis daeckeellus Kearfott, 1903 Thaumatopsis daeckellus Bleszynski & Collins, 1962
Thaumatopsis_solutellus
5348 – Crambus lyonsellus 5349 – Crambus youngellus, Young's grass-veneer moth 5350 – Crambus daeckellus 5351 – Crambus gausapalis 5352 W – Crambus trichusalis
List of moths of North America (MONA 4618–5509)
List_of_moths_of_North_America_(MONA_4618–5509)
wyethiae Coleophora xyridella Coleotechnites gibsonella Cosmia calami Crambus daeckellus Cudonigera houstonana Decaturia pectinalis Deidamia inscriptum Depressaria
List of moths of the United States
List_of_moths_of_the_United_States
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
Surname or Lastname
English and German
English and German : topographic name for someone who owned or lived by a meadow, or a metonymic occupational name for someone who made or sold hay, from Middle English gras, Middle High German gras ‘grass’, ‘pasture’, ‘grazing’.English : nickname for a stout man, from Anglo-Norman French gras ‘fat’, from Latin crassus (which was itself used as a Roman family name), with the initial changed under the influence of grossus (see Gross).Scottish : occupational name, reduced from Gaelic greusaiche ‘shoemaker’. A certain John Grasse alias Cordonar (Middle English cordewaner ‘shoemaker’) is recorded in Scotland in 1539.South German : nickname for an irascible man, from Middle High German graz ‘intense’, ‘angry’.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin) and French
English (of Norman origin) and French : status name for a professional champion, especially an agent employed to represent one of the parties in a trial by combat, a method of settling disputes current in the Middle Ages. The word comes from Old French champion, campion (Late Latin campio, genitive campionis, a derivative of campus ‘plain’, ‘field of battle’). Compare Campion, Kemp.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Old French, Middle English cras ‘big’, ‘fat’ (Latin crassus).Possibly an altered spelling of German Krass.
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : from Old French champ ‘field’, ‘open land’ (Latin campus ‘plain’, ‘expanse of flat land’), a topographic name for someone who lived in or near a field or expanse of open country, or else in the countryside as opposed to a town.
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
Boy/Male
Indian, Tamil
God Shiva
Surname or Lastname
English (Devon)
English (Devon) : habitational name. There is a Lidstone in Oxfordshire, but the concentration of the surname in Devon would suggest that this is not the source.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Beautiful
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
Lord Shiva
Boy/Male
Hebrew American English Greek
May Jehovah exalt. Exalted of the Lord. Jeremiah was a 7th century prophet and the author of...
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi
With Fortune
Boy/Male
Tamil
Gaurisuta | கௌரிஸà¯à®¤à®¾
Lord Ganesh (Son of Gauri)
Boy/Male
Indian
Light
Boy/Male
Muslim
Sacred
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
One who affirms the Truth
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
CRAMBUS DAECKELLUS
n.
A genus of ground beetles, including numerous species. They devour many injurious insects.
a.
Full of crumb or crumbs.
pl.
of Iambus
n.
A foot consisting of a short syllable followed by a long one, as in /mans, or of an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one, as invent; an iambic. See the Couplet under Iambic, n.
n.
See Crab's eyes, under Crab.
pl.
of Grampus
a.
Ramose.
n.
The grampus.
pl.
of Ramus
n.
An iambus or iambic.
n.
A kind of tongs used in a bloomery.
n.
The grampus.
n.
The principal grounds of a college or school, between the buildings or within the main inclosure; as, the college campus.
a.
A word rhyming with another word.
n.
An iambic foot; an iambus.
pl.
of Iambus
n.
The grampus.
a.
A game in which one person gives a word, to which another finds a rhyme.
a.
Alt. of Camoys
n.
A toothed delphinoid cetacean, of the genus Grampus, esp. G. griseus of Europe and America, which is valued for its oil. It grows to be fifteen to twenty feet long; its color is gray with white streaks. Called also cowfish. The California grampus is G. Stearnsii.