In everyday language, the term "worm" is applied to various living forms such as larvae, insects, millipedes, centipedes, and even some vertebrates. All types of worms are divided into several groups:

  1. Flatworms

Family planaria lives in fresh water. They are hermaphrodites (they have male and female genital organs). They have a simple brain (ganglia) and nervous system, a sagittal head and two eye spots. They have the ability to regenerate.

Trematodes or flukes have complex life cycles and they live within one or more hosts. These types of worms are characterized by a well-developed digestive system with a mouth at the front end and one or more suction cups surrounding the mouth. The suction cups are used to stay attached to the inner surface of the host's body.

2. Tapeworms

Tapeworms come in all shapes and sizes. Whether they're on a rain-soaked sidewalk, in a dumpster, or at the end of a fish hook, the worms most people know are a segmented variety.

Nematoda has successfully adapted to nearly every ecosystem from sea (salt water) to fresh water, to soils, from the polar regions to the tropics, and from the highest to the lowest altitudes. These worms are ubiquitous in freshwater, marine and terrestrial environments, where they often outnumber other animals and are found in places as diverse as mountains, deserts, and ocean trenches.

4. Annel worms

Ringed worms(nereis, sea mouse, sandworm, earthworm, tubifex, leeches).
The annelids (Annelida, from the Latin anellus, "small ring"), also known as annelids or segmented worms, are a large type with over 17,000 extant species, including earthworms and leeches. The species of these worms are adapted to different ecologies - some live in marine environments such as intertidal zones and hydrothermal vents, others in fresh water, as well as in humid terrestrial habitats.

Earthworms

Anyone with a penchant for land work has encountered these shiny, pinkish-brownish tubular lifeforms on a number of occasions, hiding in the comforting damp darkness of the soil. This is well-known earthworms... Let's note a few of their features:

  1. Earthworms are incredibly diverse, with about 6,000 species around the world. Some of the most familiar species can be seen in your garden - nocturnal caterpillar (seen after dark), corner worm (popular fishing bait) or earthworm.
  2. Of the 180 species of earthworms found in the United States and Canada, 60 are invasive species brought from the Old World.
  3. Lacking lungs or other specialized respiratory organs, earthworms breathe through their skin.
  4. The skin emits a lubricating fluid that facilitates movement through underground burrows and helps keep the skin moist.
  5. Each earthworm is both male and female, producing both eggs and sperm. One end of their body is more sensitive to light than the other.
  6. Earthworms are attracted to each other by smell. These types of worms mate on the surface of the earth.
  7. Earthworm eggs look like tiny lemons. Newborn worms emerge from eggs very small but fully formed. They produce genitals during the first 2-3 months of life and reach full size in about a year. They can live up to eight years.
  8. The size of these worms varies depending on the species, from less than 2 cm to almost 3 m. Such large monsters are not found in gardens. You have to go to the tropics to see them.
  9. In the northern states of Canada, after the last ice age, earthworms were destroyed. Therefore, modern worms living in areas washed by glaciers are invaders from the ocean, which were deliberately introduced by early settlers on the assumption that the worms would improve the soil.
  10. The digestive system of an earthworm is a tube that runs straight from the front end of the body to the back, where digested material passes out. Since they mainly eat fallen leaves and soil, this allows the worms to transfer nutrients such as potassium and nitrogen into the soil. In addition, the movement of the worm in the ground creates burrows that facilitate the passage of air and loosen the soil.
  11. The northern forest of the United States suffers from earthworms, which quickly eat up the leafy layer (duff), as a result of which nutrients are less available for young growing plants, and the soil becomes more compact instead of loosening, which negatively affects the development of these forests. Earthworms can also speed up the passage of water through forest soil, which can be beneficial for agricultural land or a garden with compacted soil, but not for such forests.
  12. Since the earthworm spends most of its life underground, plowing the soil and creating intricate networks of burrows (which can extend 2m or more), their bodies are basically like a tube of muscle, arranged in two layers. One set of fibers runs lengthwise and the other runs wide, like a corset around its body. Tightening the "corset" forces the head of the worm to move forward. Then the wave of contractions returns backward through the body, squeezing the worm forward until the long muscles intercept the tail.
  13. Thin-skinned earthworms have no resistance to the sun's ultraviolet radiation, so daylight can be fatal and can usually only be found on the surface in dull, wet weather.
  14. If the worm loses one end of its body, it can be replaced; however, if it is cut in half, it dies. Contrary to popular belief, they don't become two new worms.
  15. Fossil worms similar to earthworms have been found in rocks laid down 600 million years ago.

The earthworm is such a familiar creature and few people think about its enormous importance in nature. The contribution of earthworms to soil fertility is enormous. They burst through the ground, dragging leaves and other plant debris into the soil, allowing organic matter and air to enter and water to seep. Their activities over millions of years are vital to the creation of rich, fertile soils from dense, barren clays. Unfortunately, the earthworm has many enemies - these are almost all animals and birds, but the moth is the biggest threat, since one moth can eat up to 50 earthworms in one day.

Ringworms have the highest organization of any other type of worm; for the first time they have a secondary body cavity, a circulatory system, a more highly organized nervous system. In annelids, another, secondary cavity has formed inside the primary cavity with its own elastic walls from the cells of the mesoderm. It can be compared to airbags, a pair in each segment of the body. They "bloated", filled the space between the organs and support them. Now each segment has received its own support from the bags of the secondary cavity filled with liquid, and the primary cavity has lost this function.

They live in soil, fresh and sea water.

External structure

The earthworm has a body almost round in cross section, up to 30 cm long; there are 100-180 segments, or segments. In the anterior third of the body there is a thickening - a belt (its cells function during the period of sexual reproduction and oviposition). On the sides of each segment, two pairs of short elastic setae are developed, which help the animal to move in the soil. The body is reddish-brown in color, lighter on the flat ventral side and darker on the convex dorsal side.

Internal structure

A characteristic feature of the internal structure is that earthworms have developed real tissues. Outside, the body is covered with a layer of ectoderm, the cells of which form the integumentary tissue. The skin epithelium is rich in mucous glandular cells.

Muscle

Under the cells of the skin epithelium there is a well-developed musculature, consisting of a layer of annular and a more powerful layer of longitudinal muscles located under it. Powerful longitudinal and circular muscles change the shape of each segment separately.

The earthworm alternately compresses and lengthens them, then expands and shortens them. The wavy contractions of the body allow not only to crawl along the burrow, but also to move the soil apart, expanding the course.

Digestive system

The digestive system begins at the front end of the body with the mouth opening, from which food enters the pharynx, the esophagus (in earthworms, three pairs of calcareous glands flow into it, the lime coming from them into the esophagus serves to neutralize the acids of decaying leaves that animals feed on). Then the food passes into an enlarged goiter and a small gizzard (the muscles in its walls contribute to the grinding of food).

From the stomach almost to the posterior end of the body stretches the middle intestine, in which food is digested and absorbed by enzymes. Undigested residues enter the short hind intestine and are thrown out through the anus. Earthworms feed on half-decayed plant debris, which they swallow together with the ground. When passing through the intestines, the soil mixes well with organic matter. Earthworm excrement contains five times more nitrogen, seven times more phosphorus and eleven times more potassium than ordinary soil.

Circulatory system

The circulatory system is closed and consists of blood vessels. The dorsal vessel stretches along the whole body above the intestines, and below it - the abdominal vessel.

In each segment, they are united by an annular vessel. In the anterior segments, some of the annular vessels are thickened, their walls contract and rhythmically pulsate, due to which the blood is distilled from the dorsal vessel to the abdominal one.

The red color of blood is due to the presence of hemoglobin in the plasma. It plays the same role as in humans - nutrients dissolved in the blood are carried throughout the body.

Breath

For most annelids, including earthworms, skin respiration is characteristic, almost all gas exchange is provided by the surface of the body, therefore the worms are very sensitive to wet soil and do not occur in dry sandy soils, where their skin dries up soon, and after rains, when in the soil a lot of water, creep out to the surface.

Nervous system

In the anterior segment of the worm there is a periopharyngeal ring - the largest accumulation of nerve cells. It begins with the abdominal nerve chain with nodes of nerve cells in each segment.

Such a nervous system of the knotty type was formed by the fusion of the nerve cords of the right and left sides of the body. It ensures the independence of the segments and the well-coordinated work of all organs.

Excretory organs

The excretory organs have the form of thin loop-shaped curved tubes, which open at one end into the body cavity, and the other outward. New, simpler funnel-shaped excretory organs - metanephridia - remove harmful substances into the external environment as they accumulate.

Reproduction and development

Reproduction occurs only sexually. Earthworms are hermaphrodites. Their reproductive system is located in several segments of the anterior part. The testes lie in front of the ovaries. When mating, the spermatozoa of each of the two worms are transferred to the seminal receptacles (special cavities) of the other. Fertilization of worms is cross.

During copulation (mating) and oviposition, the cells of the girdle on the 32-37 - segment secrete mucus, which serves to form an egg cocoon, and a protein liquid to feed the developing embryo. The discharge of the girdle forms a kind of mucous sleeve (1).

The worm crawls out of it with its rear end forward, laying eggs in the mucus. The edges of the sleeve stick together and a cocoon is formed, which remains in the earthen burrow (2). Embryonic development of eggs occurs in a cocoon, from which young worms emerge (3).

Sense organs

The sense organs are very poorly developed. The earthworm does not have real organs of vision; their role is played by individual light-sensitive cells in the skin. The receptors for touch, taste and smell are also located there. Earthworms are capable of regeneration (easily restores the back part).

Germ leaves

The germ layers are the basis of all organs. In annelids, ectoderm (outer layer of cells), endoderm (inner layer of cells) and mesoderm (intermediate layer of cells) appear at the beginning of development as three germ layers. They give rise to all major organ systems, including the secondary cavity and circulatory system.

The same organ systems are preserved in the future in all higher animals, and they are formed from the same three germ layers. Thus, the higher animals in their development repeat the evolutionary development of their ancestors.

When a fisherman is digging for worms for the upcoming fishing, then, of course, he wants to find someone more. But what would he say if he found a worm 3 meters long underground? Meanwhile, such worms are found in Australia. True, no one puts them on the hook - their number is already too small, so they are under state protection.

Australian giant earthworm (lat. Megascolides australis) is the largest known underground invertebrate in the world. He lives exclusively in Gippsland, a rural area of ​​Victoria with an area of ​​only 1000 square meters. km. And even then, you can not meet him here on every corner - like a real earthworm, he chooses clay and moist soil for life not far from water bodies.

Whether it was before - when the entire south of modern Gippsland was covered with dense eucalyptus forests, the giant worms had a place to settle down. However, the trees were cut down to make way for agriculture, and the soil itself was constantly disturbed: they plowed, planted seeds, fertilized and plowed again. This place became uncomfortable for an earthworm of this size, so he had to settle on the remaining small and isolated remnants of the forest.

An adult specimen of the giant Australian worm reaches a length of 2.5-3 meters with a body thickness of 2-3 cm and a weight of about 700 g. It is not surprising that from afar it can be confused with a long emaciated snake. However, upon closer inspection, segments characteristic of all earthworms are clearly visible, of which the Australian giant has at least three hundred.

Giant earthworms very rarely crawl to the surface - they spend their entire life in long underground tunnels that they dig up on their own. Usually the worm digs the ground with the front of its body, however, if the soil is too hard, it passes it through the intestines and throws it to the surface in heaps. One individual is able to process 500-700 g of soil per day.

It's funny that when moving underground, the giant worm behaves very noisily - smacking its lips, gurgling or buzzing. And all because the walls of its tunnels are covered with a special secret that makes sliding easier. Australian earthworms breed in spring and summer. They are hermaphrodites, but they need a pair for successful fertilization. After mating, each of the partners lays eggs in a pre-built cocoon.

The eggs of the giant earthworm ripen and develop throughout the year. The hatched cubs do not differ in anything other than size from their parents. The length of their body, according to our standards, is no longer small - 20 cm, but only after 5 years they grow to their final size and begin to reproduce. The Australian giant worm has a maximum lifespan of 10 years.

The people of Australia have a lot of reverence for their unusual neighbors. An annual international festival "Karmai" (the name of a worm in the dialect of local aborigines) was even established in their honor. In addition, in 1985, a one-hundred-meter-long attraction-museum dedicated to the giant earthworm was built.

- (Vermes), a composite group of invertebrates, uniting lower bilaterally symmetrical animals (Bilateria) with an elongated body, the swarm was previously assigned the rank of type. Modern Researchers divide Ch. into independent, types: flat Ch., nemertines, ... ... Biological encyclopedic dictionary

- (Vermes) extensive c. invertebrates, characterized by a number of common features: a bilateral body structure, the development of a musculocutaneous sac covering the body and consisting of a single layer of epithelium and variously arranged muscles, the absence of ... ... Geological encyclopedia

Worm, worm ... Russian verbal stress

1. WORM, her; Hearts, worm; pl. (unit heart, s; g.). Card suit, indicated by red hearts. Lead hearts. Seven of hearts. Ch. Trump cards. On hands one ch. ◁ Hearts; Chervonny, oh, oh. C. ace, king. 2. WORM See Worm. * * * worms ... ... encyclopedic Dictionary

Hearts, hearts, suit, worms, worm Dictionary of Russian synonyms. worms n., number of synonyms: 6 fats (5) suit ... Synonym dictionary

WORM- (vermes), a type (and according to some authors a group of types) of invertebrates, occupying in terms of the height of their organization, as it were, a middle position between coelenterates, on the one hand, and arthropods (and soft-bodied), on the other. Ch. Have b. h. ... ... Great medical encyclopedia

worms- WORMS, worms, colloquial. decrease heart ... Dictionary-thesaurus of synonyms for Russian speech

WORM, a collection of invertebrates. Most worms have an elongated body, the walls of which are composed of the skin and muscles. About 40 thousand species. Free-living forms live in seas, fresh waters and soil. Moreover,… … Modern encyclopedia

A combined group of primitive invertebrates with an elongated body, uniting flatworms, primocellular worms, non-melaminths, nemerteans, annelids, etc. Big Encyclopedic Dictionary

WORMS, worms. see hearts. Ushakov's explanatory dictionary. D.N. Ushakov. 1935 1940 ... Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary

WORM, her, yam and WORM, worm, worm. In playing cards: the name of the red suit with the image of hearts. King of hearts. | adj. red, oh, oh and heart, oh, oh (colloquial). Lady of Hearts. Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary. S.I. Ozhegov, N.Yu. Shvedova. ... ... Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

Books

  • Worms, R. Flanagan. 1995 edition. The preservation is very good. A multimillion-strong country, proud of a powerful army, enthusiastically chanting "USA" and an army machine crushing people under itself. Army and ...
  • Parasitic worms are the cause of unrecognized diagnoses, OI Eliseeva. What is helminthiasis, what types of parasites can inhabit our organs, and what ways of their penetration into the human body are known. Symptoms of helminthiasis and its similarity to ...

Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language, Dal Vladimir

worm

m. worm, worm; worm, worm, worms, cheryov hard. (from the belly, belly); a ringed, legless animal that crawls, crawls; in common parlance, caterpillars are also called worms, especially. carnivores, in the body of animals or in corpses, as well as intestines and worms. A perch bites on a worm, is taken, on an earthworm, an earthworm. A worm in the dust - and that is God's creation. He won't crush a worm, meek man. The worm will eat all flesh. Freeze the worm, eat to starve. As a worm in a nut, there is sorrow in the heart. Not a worm that a person inadvertently eats, or a worm that eats a person! The worm also succeeds forever. Without God, the worm will swallow. Earthworms crawl out - to bad weather.

Worms, pl. red suit in cards, with heart-shaped glasses; hooves vlad.

Worm, hyoid ligament, frenum, in humans and animals.

Worms, tool. harsh, buckwheat dough for kvass, rubbed into a sieve and poured with vegetable oil. Worm, worm, worm, referring to worms. A worm tin where anglers keep worms. Worm gain, from a worm. Wormworm m. Wormworm w. who drives caterpillars fiddles with them; who is digging worms in the bucket, etc. Wormy, what are the worms in, what is eaten by them. Wormy corpse; - an apple, a tree, a wormhole, a wormhole, a wormhole, a wormhole is also a move, a hole cut by a worm. Pear with a wormhole. Worm worm for bread, for a coniferous forest. Wormwood tree. Worm-worm, worm-baked bread, wood, fruits. The wormhole is not a reproach to the red apple. Grungy southern sowing. wormy. Basok (red on the outside), but rather scarlet. To worm what, to make wormy; worm, become wormy, be eaten by worms, caterpillars. Cherva w. baby, kids, black sheep, brood of bees, testicles, caterpillars and larvae; in each black cell, one testicle; caterpillars are fed by bees with bee bread, bread, and the larva is sealed tightly with wax, this is a printed or covered black. Cheat, about the womb, sow, seed, lay eggs. Blackened cells, blackened, in which the testicle. Worm, draw a beehive, transplant a nest, wax foundation with a worm, from beehive to beehive. Scarlet, action. by verb.

The institution is a mother of cherries, children, testicular socks, offspring. Cheat, the same where they say devil instead of worm. The uterus began to cherish. Chervenitsa arch. genus of scapula, some dig worms for oud.

Plant, see bugaz. A worm, a legless lizard of hot countries. Worm, Coecilia, snake-like reptile of hot countries, legless toad; other types of her eyelessness. Scale m. Insect Coccus, cochineal, dyeing scrub, vermiform; simple analysis of it: clerical seed.

Antimony and sulfur composition, kermes. Cherven m. Old. the month of June, it is time to collect the worm in the western provinces;

church. scarlet-dyed yarn or fabrics. Wormweed m. Plant Barbada? repnik?

Rasten. Potentilla argentea. Wormwood m. Wormwood, wormy grass and wormwood, wooden or wormwood, zabirukha, ironworm, male toad? gourd? milk, rake, five-leafed leaf, ulabnik, dog; from its root in southern and western Russia, a scale insect is harvested.

The worm and the worm are also plants. Scleranthus annuus, divala, grassless herb, cochineal, chewing gum, clerical root.

Wormwood plant Thlaspi arvense, yarutka, money bank, talaban, verednik, toad, golicek, komelek, klopets? Little worm, dye plant, Anchusa tinctoria. Scarlet, wormy, crimson and crimson, worm-colored, bright crimson. Chlamyda scarlet, church. And sometimes the royal coffin is wooden, in the middle it is lined with cherry velvet, and on top it is worm-like, Kotoshikhin. Raised banner, banged bangs, Word about Igor's regiment. Scarlet scarlet, scarlet f. clothes of this color, nowadays. solemn outerwear of the sovereign, ermine covered with worm cloth, mantle, porphyry.

Worm, scarlet yarn. Scarlet, from crimson yarn, fabric. Scarlet m. Paint scale, scarlet, hook, crimson, crimson. Redness crimsonness, crimsonness. Scarlet, paint with scarlet paint; turn scarlet, become scarlet, turn purple, turn purple. Sunset, sunrise turns scarlet. Scarlet ink or ink, bright red vokhra, ferruginous clay, which is used to paint fences, roofs, etc. Chervonny Yuzhn. app. red, scarlet, bright red.

To worms, card suit, referring. Ace of Hearts. Chervonka, card of hearts. Chervonny noun or ducat m. gold coin about three rubles for silver, bundle, Dutch gold. Red gold, of the kindness that goes to the chervonets. Worm-worm (worm-worm) drugs, anthelmintic. Chervogon, wormogon, plant. Zygophillum. Worm-like, worm-like, worm-like or worm-like, like a worm.

Explanatory dictionary of the Russian language. D.N. Ushakov

worm

worm, m. The old name of the letter "h".

worm

worm, pl. worms, worms, m.

    An oblong, soft-bodied, boneless animal. Earthworm. You are buried in the crackling frosts, the greedy worm has not touched you. Nekrasov.

    Insect larva (colloquial). Silky worms.

    transfer Insignificance (rhetorician). I am a king, I am a slave, I am a worm, I am a god. Derzhavin.

    transfer Symbolic designation of painful, excruciating anxiety (book). A worm of suffering lurked in my chest. A.

Explanatory dictionary of the Russian language. S.I.Ozhegov, N.Yu.Shvedova.

worm

I, pl. -and, -ey, m.

    A boneless crawling animal with an elongated body. Flat, annelid worms. Earthen h. Silky h. (Silkworm caterpillar).

    transfer., what. In combination with the words "doubt", "repentance", "envy" and some others: about a hidden, constantly tormenting feeling. Ch. Doubts sharpen the heart.

    adj. worm, th, th (to 1 value).

New explanatory and derivational dictionary of the Russian language, T. F. Efremova.

worm

    1. An invertebrate animal that moves by bending its long body.

      colloquial An insect larva similar to such an animal.

      Control. as a symbol of excruciating, painful anxiety.

  1. m. A pitiful, insignificant person; insignificance.

    m. The name of the letter of the ancient Slavic or old Russian alphabet.

Encyclopedic Dictionary, 1998

Worm (novel)

"Worm", "Doll" is the last novel by the English writer John Fowles, published in 1985. The work describes the fictitious events preceding the birth of the founder of the shakers sect Anna Lee, which was moved by the author one year ahead of the real events, in February 1737. The title of the novel, explained by the author in the prologue, refers to the meaning of the English word used in the late 17th - early 18th century maggot which had the meaning of "whim, fantasy"; other possible interpretations of the name become clear as the story progresses. Fowles' style and meta-storytelling techniques have allowed critics to classify this novel as a postmodern literature.

The chronology of the events of the novel is clearly marked; they begin at the end of April 1736, when a group of the main participants in the described events is formed. Described from different points of view, at first as some personal vision of the author, they are later transmitted from a third person and in the form of interrogations conducted under oath by the lawyer Henry Askew on behalf of his noble employer, probably the Duke, who is concerned about the disappearance of his youngest son. The external side of events gradually becomes clear, according to which the disappeared, calling himself "Mr. Bartholomew", accompanied initially only by his deaf-mute servant Dick, hires three companions to make a mysterious journey. These companions are London's Rebecca Hocknell, actor John Lacey, and idle David Jones. Each of them, in the process of interrogation, sets out different versions of what happened, according to the degree of their awareness and life views. From their testimony, the reader learns that educated and alien to the temptations of life, "Bartholomew", wishing to come into contact with some "guardians of the waters," and fearing surveillance on the way through Exmoor, hires Lacey and Jones to distract attention yourself. Rebecca's role remains unclear. The version proposed at the beginning that she was hired to participate in an orgy, and then a satanic rite, is refuted by Rebecca's own version, according to which she witnessed the communication of "Bartholomew" with members of the Trinity, first at Stonehenge, and then in a Devonshire cave; "Bartholomew" himself returned to Heaven, where he came from in a sense. A modern reader in its description can suggest a story about contact with an extraterrestrial civilization or time travelers. The last part of the book is devoted to the later life of Rebecca and her family, who changed their original Quaker beliefs to more radical ones, close to the kamizars.

Throughout the book, the author shares his attitude to what is happening, explains the motivations of the heroes of the story based on the ideas of various estates characteristic of that time about the predetermination of their position, the role of their "", individualism, women's rights, progress. The author also provides various details about the life and laws of England in the 1730s, placing his work in a historical context. Thus, the Law on Witchcraft, adopted a year before the events described, is mentioned, which made it illegal to accuse someone of witchcraft; adopted, which provided for severe penalties for the most minor offenses. The novel also contains references to literary works and authors of the 18th-19th centuries. So, Fowles writes that he sought to use the techniques of Daniel Defoe. He also reports that John Lacy played in the play by Henry Fielding "Pasquin" - interestingly, one of the plays by this author is called. The mention in one of Askew's letters about the riots caused by the actions of the captain in Edinburgh may be a reference to the novel "Dungeon of Edinburgh" by Walter Scott, which describes the riots, and the manner of the narrative resembles Fowles' techniques in this novel. Moreover, the story of the appearance of the devil in the form of a black man, told in Scott's novel through the lips of his character David Deans, resembles the version of events in Stonehenge told by Rebecca to David Jones.

The novel was translated into Russian twice: V. Lanchikov as "The Worm" in 1996, and A. Safronov and O. Serebryanaya as "Doll" in 2011.

Examples of the use of the word worm in the literature.

Romuald - West African young rot, avant-garde bank worms.

These goods were marine animals: sponges, tunicates, sea anemones, all kinds of starfish, molluscs, barnacles, worms, creeping flowers of the sea, sea urchins - thorny, nondescript bigheads, crabs, seahorses, sea goats - so transparent that they almost do not give a shadow - in a word, a fabulous many-sided world of smaller brothers, inhabitants of the ocean.

At home, retiring in their stone cell and establishing on the worn out worms a heavy copper inkwell brought with him, Alexy translated the fiery words of the Teacher, who had rejected all earthly self-interest, and immediately remembered who and what kind of bribe should be given tomorrow in the secret of the great hartophylactic and who not to offend by handing a bribe to his blood thief.

Amirani cut off the last dragon's head, crawled out three worm: white, yellow and blue.

Where flies sit, there worms start, where his anda, there is cunning, deceit, deception.

Every person secretly gnaws worm anti-state feeling, because any power crushes.

During the years of perestroika, when worm anti-state sentiment was fed to incredible proportions, all parts of the state were under fire - from economic bodies, the military-industrial complex, the army and the police to the school system and orphanages.

He advanced on holothurians, peacefully swallowing silt, on starfish that slowly crawled along the bottom, on marble-white saccular ascidians that burst under its heavy soles, on calcareous tubes worms, sticking up their feathery gills with the finest branched pattern of the circulatory system.

Raising Guyer with difficulty, he rolled it over the edge of the basket just at the moment when the giant red worm rammed the wall - to stop such a monster, little aerosol was sprayed.

In the same place, the girls, while we were dragging canoes, managed to dig up worms for fishing and to steal an old iron iron with an unclear past and future.

We got acquainted with ulva - sea salad, whose wide leaves are edible, and with red algae, phyllophora and coralline, and with sea worms, who are hiding in tube houses, and with a sea acorn, one of the most tenacious and tenacious stowaways.

The plate read: CAPELLA CHIJI Built by Raphael Designed by Lorenzo Bernini Langdon reread the inscription twice, but still gnawed at it worm doubts.

A scorching heat burst through the bulletproof glass, fiery worm disappeared from my eyes, but by the tremor of the air over the slope, by the puffs of steam and the sheaves of crackling sparks that the bushes turned into, we realized that he was moving towards the top of the hill.

I hit, choose the last trump, play B10 worms, I go to the table for the queen of spades and my disappearing diamonds fly to the ace worms and the king of clubs.

Dissolve me fast, that there can burn so, not the intestines of Rusty Worm, in fact?