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Cricket (insect)

\n\nThe cricket are insectss related to the grasshopper and katydid (order Orthoptera). They have somewhat flattened bodies and long antennae. Crickets are known for the loud chirping noises they make by rubbing their corrugated wing casings against combs on their hind legs. The females have a long needlelike egg-laying organ (ovipositor). There are around 900 species known worldwide. The true crickets constitute a family (Gryllidae) which contains the common or field crickets and in addition several other forms more or less different in appearance. Field crickets are brown or black; despite the name, some of them enter houses. Tree crickets are usually green with broad, transparent wings, and frequent trees and shrubs. Mole crickets are thick-bodied brown insects with forelimbs that are highly developed for burrowing. In addition to these, several other orthopteran species are also called "crickets", although they are not crickets in the true meaning of the term:
  • Katydids, Bush "crickets"\n*Cave or camel "crickets"\n*Sand "cricket"\n*Mormon "cricket"\n*Weta "crickets", Jerusalem crickets, and "Parktown Prawns"\n*Mole "crickets"
The sound that crickets make is often used in media such as film and television to represent silence. This is usually used for comical effect. See Orthoptera for more details on these and other families. Name in another language\n*Traditional Chinese: 蟋蟀

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