The full-grown caterpillar is a remarkable-looking animal.
The length of the full-grown caterpillar is about 1 inch.
In fact the full-grown caterpillar is very variable in its colouring.
There is a purplish pink cast on the head and mouth of the full-grown caterpillar, and purplish red around the props.
After a month spent in eating, and skin casting, the full-grown caterpillar is over two inches long, and as a rule a light green.
The figure of a nearly full-grown caterpillar (Plate 2) is from a drawing in colour by Mr. A.
Green, inclining to yellowish or greyish, is the colour of the full-grown caterpillar.
The organ, which is extended in the figure of the full-grown caterpillar, is not always in evidence, but when the caterpillar is annoyed the forked arrangement makes its appearance from a fold in the forepart of the ring nearest the head.
The full-grown caterpillar is bluish-grey, dotted with glossy black warts, from each of which there is a short blackish hair.
A full-grown caterpillar was on one occasion found at Raindene in Sussex on poplar, which is a well-known food of the species on the Continent.
The full-grown caterpillar of the Thistle butterfly is about one and a quarter inches long and of a general yellowish color, more or less marked with blackish as well as with paler lines of color.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "grown caterpillar" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.