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bloodworm

[ bluhd-wurm ]

noun

  1. any of several red or red-blooded annelid worms, especially various earthworms.
  2. the freshwater larva of midges.


bloodworm

/ ˈblʌdˌwɜːm /

noun

  1. the red wormlike aquatic larva of the midge, Chironomus plumosus , which lives at the bottom of stagnant pools and ditches
  2. a freshwater oligochaete tubifex worm
  3. any of several small reddish worms used as angling bait
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Word History and Origins

Origin of bloodworm1

First recorded in 1735–45; blood + worm
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Example Sentences

Not all of the bloodworm’s mysteries are solved: Little is understood about how the organism first evolved this system and how copper is handled within the worm’s body.

“It was like a sewer. No one wanted to be there—not even bloodworms,” she said.

Her intense, often color-saturated photographs pulse with spellbinding strangeness: squids, jellies and nudibranchs; whelks, bloodworms and drupes; conches, urchins and chitons.

They received special care and were fed a diet of bloodworm and shrimp and are now on display to the public.

The one-week-old turtles are now receiving special care and are being fed a diet of bloodworm and shrimp before they go on display to the public next week.

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blood workbloodwort