moulted

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İngilizce - İngilizce
past of moult
molt
To shed in such a manner
molt
The skin or feathers cast off during the process of [[#Verb|molt]]ing
molt
To shed hair, feathers, skin, horns etc. and replace it by a fresh layer
molt
to cast off, as hair, feathers, etc
molt
{v} to cast or shed fethers
moult
{v} to shed, drop or lose fethers
molt
To shed or cast the hair, feathers, skin, horns, or the like, as an animal or a bird
molt
{i} periodical shedding (of horns, skins, feathers, etc.) to make way for new growth
molt
As the gypsy moth caterpillar grows, it sheds the outer covering, called molting, at the end of each instar Gypsy moth caterpillars generally molt five times before they reach their full length
molt
(moult) In a mammal, the act or process of shedding or casting off the hair, outer layer of skin, or horns; most mammals shed the hair once, twice, or three times annually The castoff covering (obsolete) As a verb; To be shed or to shed
molt
of Melt
molt
when a lobster sheds its shell so that it can grow larger
molt
molting
molt
the replacement of feathers
molt
When an animal looses its old fur and starts to grow new fur Birds will molt their feathers, by loosing the old feathers, and growing new ones
molt
a bird is molting when it loses all of its old feathers and grows new ones
molt
To shed the outer body covering
molt
see moult. the American spelling of moult (mout (14-17 centuries), from mutian , from mutare; MUTATE)
molt
periodic shedding of the cuticle in arthropods or the outer skin in reptiles
molt
The skin or feathers cast off during the process of molting
molt
The shedding of the exoskeleton ("skin") of a caterpillar allowing for growth Caterpillars experience several molts before pupating
molt
The process by which a bird renews part or all of its plumage by shedding old, worn feathers and growing new ones
molt
To cast, as the hair, skin, feathers, or the like; to shed
molt
To shed an outer covering such as feathers, cuticle, or skin, which is replaced periodically by new growth
molt
cast off hair, skin, horn, or feathers; "out dog sheds every Spring"
molt
To cast off the outgrown skin or cuticle in the process of insect development; changing from one instar to the next
molt
the casting off of the outgrown skin (exoskeleton) during growth
molt
The periodic shedding of the anthropod exoskeleton to allow growth until the adult stage is reached
molt
To shed old feathers or hairs so that new ones can grow Birds molt every year; so do elephant seals
molt
{f} shed periodically (horn, skin, feathers, etc.) to make way for new growth
molt
The act or process of changing the feathers, hair, skin, etc
moult
The act or process of changing the feathers, hair, skin, etc
moult
the process of shedding old and growing new feathers
moult
To shed or lose a covering of fur, feathers or skin etc
moult
The process of shedding or losing a covering of fur, feathers or skin etc
moult
periodic shedding of the cuticle in arthropods or the outer skin in reptiles
moult
The process of the bird losing or dropping its old feathers and re-growing new ones
moult
cast off hair, skin, horn, or feathers; "out dog sheds every Spring"
moult
Shed fur or feathers (for example, foxes moult their thick winter fur in summer, regrowing the fur over the summer in preparation for the following winter)
moult
molting
moult
{i} periodical shedding (of horns, skins, feathers, etc.) to make way for new growth (also molt)
moult
To cast, as the hair, skin, feathers, or the like; to shed
moult
moult moults moulting moulted in AM, use molt When an animal or bird moults, it gradually loses its coat or feathers so that a new coat or feathers can grow. Finches start to moult at around twelve weeks of age. Variant of molt. when a bird or animal moults, it loses feathers or hair so that new ones can grow
moult
To shed or cast the hair, feathers, skin, horns, or the like, as an animal or a bird
moult
{f} shed periodically (horn, skin, feathers, etc.) to make way for new growth (also molt)
moult
The general name for the process by which the spider sheds its exoskeleton, allowing for growth and the regeneration of lost or damaged limbs Properly called ecdysis