Dictionary Definition
stinger
Noun
1 a cocktail made of made of creme de menthe and
brandy
2 a remark capable of wounding mentally; "the
unkindest cut of all" [syn: cut]
3 a portable low altitude surface-to-air missile
system using infrared guidance and an impact fuse; fired from the
shoulder
4 a sharp organ of offense or defense (as of a
wasp or stingray or scorpion) often connected with a poison
gland
5 a sharp stinging blow
User Contributed Dictionary
see Stinger
English
Noun
stinger- A pointed portion of an insect or arachnid used for attack.
- Anything, such as an insult, that stings mentally or psychologically
- a cocktail of brandy and crème de menthe
Translations
anything that stings mentally or psychologically
- Japanese: (iyami)
- Portuguese: insulto, provocação
cocktail
Anagrams
Extensive Definition
A stinger (or more correctly, sting) is a common
term for a sharp organ or
body part found in various animals (typically arthropods) or plants that
usually delivers some kind of venom
(usually piercing the skin of another animal) or an electric shock.
A poisonous sting differs from other piercing organs in that it
pierces by its own action, as opposed to teeth, which pierce by the force
of jaws, or thorns,
which pierce by the action of the victim.
"Sting" also refers to the wound caused by a
sting. It is also used as a verb: "to sting" is to inflict such a
wound.
Zoology
The main type of construction of stings is a sharp organ of offense or defense, especially when connected with a venom gland, and adapted to inflict a wound by piercing; as the caudal sting of a scorpion.The sting is typically located at the rear of the
animal, near the tail (if
any). Animals with stings include bees, wasps, hornets, and scorpions - although the
scorpion's sting is not homologous
to that of the other three, but is rather an example of convergent
evolution.
Uniquely in honey bees
amongst bees and wasps, the workers' stings (a modified ovipositor as in other
stinging Hymenoptera)
are barbed, and lodge in the flesh of mammals upon use and tear free
from the honey bee's body, leading to the bee's death within
minutes. The sting has its own ganglion and it continues to
saw into the target's flesh and release venom for several minutes.
The question of how such a trait could have evolved, when it is of
such an obvious disadvantage to the individual, is resolved when
one realizes that mammalian predators can easily destroy the entire
colony if not repelled; if the colony is destroyed, a worker, being
sterile, will die without offspring, so only through defense of the
colony can she see to it that her genes are passed on. The barbs
ensure that a honey bee's attack is only suicidal if the attacker
is a mammal; they can sting other bees (in inter-colony raids)
repeatedly. Thus, under natural conditions, the suicidal aspect of
the honey bee sting's barbs only come into play in the event of an
attack which threatens to wipe out the entire colony. The sting of
nearly all other bees and wasps is not barbed, and so can be used
to sting mammals repeatedly; the only exceptions (yellowjacket wasps and the
Mexican
honey wasp) have barbs so small that they do not cause the
sting apparatus to pull free, so they may sting more than
once.
Non-arthropods with stings
Organs that perform similar functions in
non-arthropods are often referred to as "stingers". These include
the modified dorsal fin of
the stingray, the
cnidocyte tentacles of the jellyfish, and the venomous
spurs on the hind legs of the male duck-billed platypus.
As well, the term is sometimes applied to the
fang (a modified tooth) of
a snake. One species of
snake, Psammophylax
rhombeatus, is even known as skaapsteker (Afrikaans for sheep
stinger). It is extremely common in South Africa, and far north
along the east and west coast.
Botany
A sharp-pointed hollow hair seated on a gland which secrets an acrid fluid, as in nettles. The points of these hairs usually break off in the wound, and the acrid fluid is pressed into it.Sources and references
- the 1913 edition of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.''
stinger in Aragonese: Fizón
stinger in German: Giftstachel
stinger in Spanish: Aguijón
stinger in French: Dard (biologie)
stinger in Galician: Aguillón
stinger in Lithuanian: Geluonis
stinger in Dutch: Angel (insect)
stinger in Japanese: スティンガー (カクテル)
stinger in Polish: Żądło
stinger in Russian: Жало
stinger in Sicilian:
Puncigghiuni