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borer

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borer, name applied to various animals that are injurious because of their ability to penetrate plant or animal tissues. Among insects, some borers are beetles, e.g., the flatheaded apple-tree borer, a serious pest of many shade and fruit trees; the roundheaded apple-tree borer; and the bronze birch, locust, elm, shot-hole, and poplar borers. Other boring insects are moths that are harmful in the larval stage, e.g., the peach, currant, squash, lilac, and southern cornstalk borers and the European corn borer corn borer or European corn borer, common name for the larva of a moth of the family Pyralidae, introduced from S Europe into the Boston area in 1917.
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. Marine borers include the boring sponges, certain marine worms, and some bivalve mollusks, e.g., the rock borer, the shipworm shipworm or teredo , marine bivalve mollusk of the family Teredinidae, specialized for boring in wood. A shipworm is not a worm, but a greatly elongated clam.
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, and the piddock, which are thought to secrete acids that dissolve rock and other substances. The hagfish hagfish, primitive marine fish of the order Cyclostomata, or jawless fishes (see cyclostome), of worldwide distribution in cold and temperate waters. Its rudimentary skeleton, of cartilage rather than bone, has a braincase, but no jaw.
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, or borer, is a marine pest that burrows into the bodies of other fish.
borer [′bȯr·ər]
(invertebrate zoology)
Any insect or other invertebrate that burrows into wood, rock, or other substances.
(mechanical engineering)
An apparatus used to bore openings into the earth up to about 8 feet (2.4 meters) in diameter.


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109 the borer is described, but the friction of this upon the fireblock (to which the phrase `held firmly' clearly belongs) must also have been mentioned.
The inventor of a new cannon associated himself with the caster and the borer.
 
 
 
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