Swarm

This time we are looking on the crossword clue for: Swarm.
it’s A 5 letters crossword puzzle definition. See the possibilities below.

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Possible Answers: TEEM, ARMY, MOB, HIVE, HORDE, CROWD, ABOUND, BESIEGE.

Last seen on: –NY Times Crossword 8 Mar 24, Friday
NY Times Crossword 20 Nov 20, Friday
The Washington Post Crossword – Sep 26 2020
Wall Street Journal Crossword – January 11 2020 – Mixed-Up Job Listings
NY Times Crossword 22 Oct 19, Tuesday
Canadiana Crossword – Apr 1 2019
LA Times Crossword 20 Jan 19, Sunday
The Washington Post Crossword – Jan 20 2019
NY Times Crossword 13 Dec 18, Thursday
Wall Street Journal Crossword – Sep 13 2018 – Look Out Below!
NY Times Crossword 20 Jun 2018, Wednesday

Random information on the term “MOB”:

A crowd is a large group of people that are gathered or considered together. The term “the crowd” may sometimes refer to the lower orders of people in general (the mob). A crowd may be definable through a common purpose or set of emotions, such as at a political rally, a sports event, or during looting (this is known as a psychological crowd), or may simply be made up of many people going about their business in a busy area.

The term crowd is sometimes defined in contrast to other group nouns for collections of humans or animals, such as aggregation, audience, group, mass, mob, populous, public, rabble and throng. Opinion researcher Vincent Price compares masses and crowds, saying that “Crowds are defined by their shared emotional experiences, but masses are defined by their interpersonal isolation.”

In human sociology, the term “mobbed” simply means “extremely crowded”, as in a busy mall or shop. In animal behaviour mobbing is a technique where many individuals of one species “gang up” on a larger individual of another species to drive them away. Mobbing behaviour is often seen in birds.

MOB on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “HIVE”:

Robert G. “Bob” Haney (March 15, 1926 – November 25, 2004) was an American comic book writer, best known for his work for DC Comics. He co-created the Teen Titans as well as characters such as Metamorpho, Eclipso, Cain, and the Super-Sons.

Haney grew up in Philadelphia, where he read popular newspaper comic strips such as Prince Valiant and Flash Gordon, and was a regular listener of radio dramas. During World War II, he served in the Navy and saw action during the Battle of Okinawa. After the war, he earned a Master’s degree from Columbia University and then embarked on a writing career, publishing a number of novels under a variety of assumed names.

In 1948, Haney entered the comic book industry. His first published comics story was “College For Murder” in Black Cat #9 (January 1948). From 1948 to 1955 Haney wrote crime and war comics for a number of publishers, including Fawcett, Standard, Hillman, Harvey, and St. John.

In large part due to the anti-comic book campaign launched by Fredric Wertham’s Seduction of the Innocent and the United States Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency in 1953, most of Haney’s publishers went out of business in the 1950s. In 1955 he connected with DC Comics and his first DC credit was the story “Frogman’s Secret!” in All-American Men of War #17 (January 1955). Thus began a long association with DC, which lasted almost thirty years, with Haney scripting just about every sort of comic DC published.

HIVE on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “HORDE”:

A band society is the simplest form of human society. A band generally consists of a small kin group, no larger than an extended family or clan; one definition sees a band as consisting of no more than 100 individuals.

Bands have a loose organization. Their power structure is often egalitarian and has informal leadership; the older members of the band generally are looked to for guidance and advice, and decisions are often made on a consensus basis, but there are no written laws and none of the specialised coercive roles (e.g., police) typically seen in more complex societies. Bands’ customs are almost always transmitted orally. Formal social institutions are few or non-existent. Religion is generally based on family tradition, individual experience, or counsel from a shaman. All known band societies hunt and gather to obtain their subsistence.

In his 1972 study, The Notion of the Tribe, Morton Fried defined bands as small, mobile, and fluid social formations with weak leadership that do not generate surpluses, pay taxes nor support a standing army.

HORDE on Wikipedia