a thing on which a bird alights or roosts, typically a branch or a horizontal rod or bar in a birdcage.
perch
a female child.
girl
a slow-moving reptile, enclosed in a scaly or leathery domed shell into which it can retract its head and thick legs.
turtle
an implement with two or more prongs used for lifting food to the mouth or holding it when cutting.
fork
a sheet of information in the form of a table, graph, or diagram.
chart
a flowerless plant which has feathery or leafy fronds and reproduces by spores released from the undersides of the fronds.
fern
feeling a need to drink.
thirsty
noisily release air from the stomach through the mouth; belch.
burp
a hard permanent outgrowth, often curved and pointed, found in pairs on the heads of cattle, sheep, goats, giraffes, etc. and consisting of a core of bone encased in keratinized skin.
horn
a long-bodied chiefly marine fish with a cartilaginous skeleton, a prominent dorsal fin, and toothlike scales.
shark
a microorganism, especially one which causes disease.
germ
spin quickly and lightly around, especially repeatedly.
twirl
a small, simple, single-story house or shelter.
yurt
a North American cereal plant that yields large grains, or kernels, set in rows on a cob. Its many varieties yield numerous products, highly valued for both human and livestock consumption.
corn
a small piece of ground used to grow vegetables, fruit, herbs, or flowers.
garden
a container consisting of one or more cells, in which chemical energy is converted into electricity and used as a source of power.
battery
smile in an irritatingly smug, conceited, or silly way.
smirk
a machine or container in which butter is made by agitating milk or cream.
churn
the direction in which a compass needle normally points, toward the horizon on the left-hand side of a person facing east, or the part of the horizon lying in this direction.
north
a fixed luminous point in the night sky which is a large, remote incandescent body like the sun.
star
writing arranged with a metrical rhythm, typically having a rhyme.
verse
a substance, such as mud or dust, that soils someone or something.
dirt
turnip
strength or energy as an attribute of physical action or movement.
force
a hollow muscular organ that pumps the blood through the circulatory system by rhythmic contraction and dilation. In vertebrates there may be up to four chambers (as in humans), with two atria and two ventricles.
heart