The cricket (pinyin: xī shuài) is also known as a cricket, a cricket, a cricketer, a cricketer, a cricketer, a cricketer, and a cricketer. (pinyin: xī shuài), also known as the cricket, crickets, crickets, crickets, scurrying crickets, dragonoxiphus ritsemae (pinyin: jinglei) and scurrying crickets. It is a family of Orthoptera insects that feed on plant stems, leaves, seeds and roots, all of which are agricultural pests. The body is black to brown, the head has long antennae, the hind legs are thick and good at jumping, and the hind legs are very explosive.
The males are good at fighting, and the two wings rub together to make a sound. To day and night out of the more, solitary nature, usually a hole a bug, rutting period, the male only to recruit female crickets live with a hole. In order to hear the male cricket's courtship call, crickets have ear drums located slightly below the joints of the front feet. Each species of cricket has a different chirp. Their chirps are representative of temperature, and the females, which do not vocalize, are commonly known as "three-tailed"
Expanded Information:
Origin of the name "Omori" ---
Origin of the name "Omori" ---
Origin of the name "Omori" ---
Origin of the name "Omori" ---
Org.
Cricket weaving comes from the chirping of crickets. "Urge to weave" is an alias of crickets, Jin Cui Bao's "ancient and modern note" "that its sound such as urgent weaving also", describing the crickets chirping as the sound of the loom sometimes high and sometimes low, as if urging the weavers to fast weaving shuttle, "Urge to Weave
The crickets wings friction pronunciation, the left wing of the sound file friction right wing pronunciation mirror, vibration frequency is high, was four rhythm, crisp and clear. Cricket for the insect order, Orthoptera, Cricket family, alias also gin crickets, crickets and so on.
The record of cricket weaving has a long and colorful history. In ancient times, there was "urge to weave song, lazy women alarmed", the Ming Dynasty Zhu Zhifan's poem "idle steps sound through the trifling window, secretly sent Sycamore falling leaves wind. The high rhyme is not reserved for victory, and the slight chanting end wants to help the machinist", and Yang Wanli's poem in Song Dynasty, "One sound can dispel one person's sorrows, and the sound of the final night is not yet over. I don't know how to reel the silk for people to weave, strong to export to promote the clothes and fur", both poems aptly describe the origin of "promote the weaving".
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