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Bug, river, E Europe, also known as Western BugBug (b g, bŭg), Pol. Bug, Ukr. Buh or Zakhidnyy Buh, river, c.480 mi (770 km) long, rising in the Volhynian-Podolian hills, W Ukraine. It flows N along the Polish-Ukrainian and Polish-Belarusian borders past Brest and then NW through Poland to join the Vistula River (with the Narew) near Warsaw. It is linked with the Dnieper by the Dnieper-Bug Canal via the Pina River and with the Niemen by the Augustov Canal via the Narva River. The Bug is also known as the Western Bug.Bug, river, Ukraine, also known as Southern BugBug or Southern Bug, river, Ukraine: see Buh Buh or Southern Buh , Ukr. Pivdynnyy Buh, river, c.490 mi (790 km) long, rising in the Volhynian-Podolian hills, W Ukraine. The Buh, flowing generally SE into the Black Sea, is navigable for c.100 mi (160 km) from Voznesensk to its mouth...... Click the link for more information. . bug, in zoologybug, common name correctly applied to insects belonging to the order Hemiptera, although members of the order Homoptera (e.g., mealybug mealybug, common name for certain unarmored scale insects that exude a granular white secretion, giving them a mealy appearance. Many are common greenhouse and crop pests. Adult females are wingless, with oval, segmented bodies and well-developed legs...... Click the link for more information. ) are sometimes referred to as bugs, as are other insects in general. The true bugs (Hemipterans) have a characteristic pair of front wings that are partially thickened and darkened at the base and partially membranous at the apex. Development is gradual through an incomplete metamorphosis metamorphosis [Gr.,=transformation], in zoology, term used to describe a form of development from egg to adult in which there is a series of distinct stages. ..... Click the link for more information. with a number of nymphal stages before the reproductively mature adult stage is reached. Most bugs are terrestrial, but many are aquatic (e.g., various water bugs water bug, name for a large number of water-living bugs, comprising several families of the order Hemiptera (true bugs). All have jointed, sharp, sucking beaks, breathe air, and undergo gradual metamorphosis (see insect). ..... Click the link for more information. ). Although bugs vary greatly in size, color, and physical appearance, they all have piercing-sucking mouthparts in the form of a jointed beak. Most species suck plant juices (e.g., the squash bug squash bug, name for a true bug, Anasa tristis, found throughout the United States and S Canada. It damages squash, pumpkin, and related plants by sucking the juices from leaves and stems. The adult is dark brown and measures about 2-3 in. (16 mm) long. bugCoding error in a computer program that prevents it from functioning as designed. Most software companies have a quality-assurance department which is charged with finding program bugs while the program is in development (debugging); bugs are also often detected by means of beta testing (testing of a product, often by potential consumers, before it is placed on the market). The term originated in a computer context in 1945 when a moth flew into and jammed an electrical relay of the Harvard Mark II computer; it was extracted and taped into the log book with the inscription “First actual case of bug being found” (the term having previously been used for other kinds of mechanical defects). bugCommonly, any insect; scientifically, any member of the insect order Heteroptera. In scientific usage, when the word “bug” is part of the common name for a member of the order Heteroptera, it is a separate word (e.g., “chinch bug”); when used as part of the common name for an organism that is not a heteropteran, it is not separated (e.g., the ladybug, in the order Coleoptera). In common usage, there are many exceptions to this convention (e.g., bedbugs are heteropterans). bug A persistent error in software or hardware. If the bug is in software, it can be corrected by changing the program. If the bug is in hardware, new circuits have to be designed.Although the derivation of bug is generally attributed to the moth that was found squashed between the points of an electromechanical relay in a computer in the 1940s, the term goes back to the 1800s to refer to flaws in mechanical systems. See buggy, bug fix, software bug, broken and Web bug. Contrast with glitch. bug1 1. any insect of the order Hemiptera, esp any of the suborder Heteroptera, having piercing and sucking mouthparts specialized as a beak (rostrum) 2. Chiefly US and Canadian any insect, such as the June bug or the Croton bug 3. Informal an error or fault, as in a machine or system, esp in a computer or computer program 4. US (in poker) a joker used as an ace or wild card to complete a straight or flush bug2 Obsolete an evil spirit or spectre; hobgoblin Bug 1. a river in E Europe, rising in W Ukraine and flowing southeast to the Dnieper estuary and the Black Sea. Length: 853 km (530 miles) 2. a river in E Europe, rising in SW Ukraine and flowing northwest to the River Vistula in Poland, forming part of the border between Poland and Ukraine. Length: 724 km (450 miles) bug [bəg] (computer science) A defect in a program code or in designing a routine or a computer. (electronics) A semiautomatic code-sending telegraph key in which movement of a lever to one side produces a series of correctly spaced dots and movement to the other side produces a single dash. An electronic listening device, generally concealed, used for commercial or military espionage. (engineering) A defect or imperfection present in a piece of equipment. (invertebrate zoology) Any insect in the order Hemiptera.
Bug or Zapadnyi Bug, a river in the USSR and Poland (marking the border over a considerable distance), right tributary of the Vistula. Length, 831 km; area of basin, 73,470 sq km. The Bug rises in the Podol’e Upland in Lvov Oblast, Ukrainian SSR. It flows at the western edge of the Lublin Upland and Podlasie. It has high water during spring and autumn flooding, which is caused by rain. There are frequent winter floods caused by the thaw of snow. The water is highest in March and April and lowest usually in September. The river freezes in late December and the ice breaks in the second half of March. The most important tributaries are the Mukhavets River, which is linked by the Dnieper-Bug Canal with the Pina River (tributary of the Pripiat’) belonging to the Dnieper system, and the Narew River; the Biebrza River, a tributary of the Narew, is linked through the Netta River by the Augustów Canal with the Czarna Hancza River, which flows into the Neman River. The Bug is navigable up to a distance of 315 km from its mouth. The main cities on the Bug are Brest, Sokal’, Chervonograd, Kamenka-Bugskaia, and Busk. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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