How do animals reproduce?
Laying Eggs (Birds, Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Insects) or Giving birth to its young alive (Mammals)
What are the types of plants?
2, Flowering and Non-Flowering
What are the different types of matter?
Solid, Liquid, Gas
What is Heat?
Heat is a form of energy. it makes things feel hot or warm.
What are the types of animals?
6 (Mammals, Fish, Insects, Amphibians, Birds, Reptiles)
What are the different parts of the plant?
Leaf, Stem, Root
What is matter?
Anything that occupies space and has mass
Give 3 examples of heat.
Fire, Sun, Oven
Where do the different types of animals live?
Land (Mammals, Birds, Reptiles, Amphibians), Water (Fish, Amphibians)
How do the different plants reproduce?
Seeds (Flowering plants) and Spores (Non-flowering plants)
How are solid and liquid similar?
Both have definite volume.
When an object becomes hotter, does it gain or lose heat?
The object gains heat when it becomes hotter.
What are the outer covering of animals?
Insects - Hard and Shell-like
Fish - Scales
Reptiles - Dry and Scaly Skin
Amphibians - Wet Skin
Mammals - Fur or Hair
Birds - Feathers
What is the life cycle of plants?
Can gas be compressed?
Yes, because it has a indefinite volume.
What is Temperature?
The measure of how hot or cold an object is.
How many stages are the life cycles of insects? What is one difference, other than the number of stages.
Three (Egg, Young, Adult) or Four (Egg, Larva, Pupa, Adult)
Young of Three-stage look like adult, Larva and Adult in Four-stage do not.
What are the functions of the different parts of the plant?
Roots - Absorb water and minerals from the soil and hard the plant firmly to the ground
Stem - holds the plant upright and transport food and water to one part of the plant to another
Leaf - make food for the plant, exchanges gases with the surroundings
What are the properties of the different states of matter?
Solid - definite shape and volume
Liquid - indefinite shape and definite volume
Gas - Indefinite shape and volume
How does heat flow?
Heat flows from the hotter to the colder region/object/place until both reach the same temperature