: any of a family (Culicidae) of dipteran flies with females that have a set of slender organs in the proboscis adapted to puncture the skin of animals and to suck their blood and that are in some cases vectors of serious diseases
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These wavelengths are particularly enticing to insects, from moths to mosquitoes.—Jessica Safavimehr, Southern Living, 3 May 2026 Add some Mosquito Bits granules to keep mosquitoes from breeding in the water.—Nan Sterman, San Diego Union-Tribune, 2 May 2026 What attracts mosquitoes more reliably than blood type is carbon dioxide.—Ryan Brennan
may 1, Sacbee.com, 1 May 2026 According to University of Washington researcher Jeffrey Riffell (via Time), mosquitoes are drawn to darker colors like black, navy, red and orange.—Ryan Brennan
may 1, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 1 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for mosquito
Word History
Etymology
Spanish, diminutive of mosca fly, from Latin musca — more at midge
: any of numerous two-winged flies of which the females have a needlelike structure of the mouth region adapted to puncture the skin and suck the blood of animals
: any of numerous dipteran flies of the family Culicidae that have a rather narrow abdomen, usually a long slender rigid proboscis, and narrow wings with a fringe of scales on the margin and usually on each side of the wing veins, that have in the male broad feathery antennae and mouthparts not fitted for piercing and in the female slender antennae and a set of needlelike organs in the proboscis with which they puncture the skin of animals to suck the blood, that lay their eggs on the surface of stagnant water, that include many species which pass through several generations in the course of a year and hibernate as adults or winter in the egg state, and that include some species which are the only vectors of certain diseases see aedes, anopheles, culex