This flying animal which has the fastest beating heart drinks from up to 1,500 flowers a day
Hummingbird
Its roots come from the Greek for "star" and "sailor"
Astronaut
Moons can have moons and they are called this
Moonmoons
The part of the Monarch butterfly that can distinguish between male and female
Wings (bonus for "black dot on inner surface = male")
The oleander is the official flower of this city because it was the first to bloom after the impact here in 1945
Hiroshima
While being known as the largest animal in the world, it can only swallow something as large as a beach ball
Blue Whale
A term that comes from the 14th-century Arabic phrase "shah mat", meaning "the king is helpless"
Checkmate
The opposite of paranoia, it is the feeling that people and entities are plotting to do you good
Pronoia
The parakeet is named literally as "long" this
Tail
This country has more cats per person than any other in the world (also lots of sheep)
New Zealand
As a defense mechanism, this common prey can see behind them without moving their heads
Rabbit
Anopheles is the Greek name for this insect, meaning "good for nothing"
Mosquito
The plural for cul-de-sac
culs-de-sac
Raccoons have four times more sensory cells in this part of their bodies than most mammals. This allows them to "see" and get images of objects without having to look at them
Paws
This city's inhabitants bite people 10 times more than sharks worldwide each year
New York
Anatidaephobia is the fear that this animal is somehow, somewhere watching you
Duck or Goose
Similar to the word defining "all the things", this term means "all the time or always"
Everywhen
The anger and frustration felt when you are unable to open packages. Also sounding like a furious spewing of lyrical rhyming
Wrap rage
A Hagfish has four of these life-giving, palpating organs
Heart
Although an island, this place does not have any seagulls
Hawaii
Contrary to dragonflies 95% success rate in hunting their prey, this Savanah animal has a mere 20% success rate
Lions
Macskaköröm is the Hungarian word for quotation marks, which literally translates to this part of a familiar feline creature
Cat claws
15th-century word meaning fresh hope, the opposite or "re"covery from despair
Respair
This unique trait allows beavers to see underwater while they swim (Hint: their eyes do not come in contact with water)
Transparent eyelids
Created 70 years ago, this board game was meant to give kids with polio a way to move freely in the pursuit of delights. The original features a boy in a leg brace walking through the start of the game
Candyland