enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Batwing (Marvel Comics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batwing_(Marvel_Comics)

    Batwing battled with Spider-Man before fleeing back to where he lived under the pier. When Spider-Man followed Batwing to the pier, he discovered that Batwing was just a scared kid who was stealing food to survive. Spider-Man read some of his history before Jimmy ran off right into the Councilman who secretly followed in his helicopter.

  3. List of hybrid creatures in folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hybrid_creatures...

    Longma – A winged horse with the scales of a dragon. Manticore - A creature with the face of a human, the body of a lion, and the tail of a scorpion. Some versions also depict it with the wings of a dragon. Opinicus - A griffin variant with the head and wings of an eagle, the body and legs of a lion, and the neck and tail of a dromedary.

  4. List of Spider-Man enemies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Spider-Man_enemies

    Stan Lee is responsible with helping create the most villains for the web-slinger and helped pave the way for the fictional rogues gallery. The majority of supervillains depicted in Spider-Man comics first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man, while some first appeared in spinoff comics such as The Spectacular Spider-Man and Marvel Team-Up and other titles.

  5. List of organisms named after works of fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_organisms_named...

    Named for having a "bat-shaped vertical spot on [its] caudal-fin" [217] Euragallia batmani Rodrigues, Goncalves & Mejdalani, 2012 Leafhopper: Batman "The specific epithet, batmani, is a reference to the dorsal region of the aedeagal base in dorsal view, which closely resembles the open wings of a bat, like those of the Batman symbol." [218]

  6. Phidippus audax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phidippus_audax

    Phidippus audax are commonly referred to as "bold jumping spiders" or "bold jumpers". [8] The species name, audax, is a Latin adjective meaning "audacious" or "bold". [8] This name was first used to describe the species by French arachnologist Nicholas Marcellus Hentz, who described the spider as being, "very bold, often jumping on the hand which threatens it". [9]

  7. Ushi-oni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ushi-oni

    According to the pictures in the scrolls of this temple, this ushi-oni had the head of a monkey and the body of a tiger, and both legs is a flying membrane-shaped wing like that of a musasabi or bat. [4] [14] The scroll and relic is currently not open to the public due to several problems, so it is open to the public only through the internet. [32]

  8. Chelicerae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelicerae

    The chelicerae consist of a base segment, sometimes called the "paturon", that articulates with the cephalothorax (or prosoma) and a fang portion that articulates with the base segment. [2] Almost all spiders have venom glands and can inject the venom through openings near the tips of their fangs when biting prey.

  9. Argiope submaronica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argiope_submaronica

    Afterward, the spider was observed to be near or on the bat as the day went by and manipulation of its parts of the mouth on the bat signified active feeding. [2] This was the first recorded phenomenon of an emballonurid bat being preyed on by an invertebrate, and the first documented proof of Argiope being able to catch and consume a mammal.