Name something you can see on the street that living and something that is not living.
Living: people, dogs, trees.
Nonliving: cars, buildings, bicyles, traffic lights.
What are the three categories of animals? How do we sort animals according to what they eat?
Herbivore, omnivore, and carnivore.
Kitten, puppy, and chick.
Name two types of solid water found in nature.
Ice, icicles, icebergs, glaciers, snowflakes, hail.
Finish this line "Sister Susie..."
"Sister Susie sitting on a thistle!"
True or false: all living things grow and need water.
Name 2 carnivores.
Sharks, lions, tigers, meerkats, cats.
What is the specific word for a baby bird breaking out of its shell?
Hatching.
Clouds, mist and fog are examples of what type of water?
Gas.
In "Let It Snow," what rhymes with "Oh the weather outside is frightful?"
"But the fire is so delightful."
Sort these things into either living or nonliving: a shovel, a snail, water, a tree.
Living: a snail and a tree.
Nonliving: a shovel and water.
What type of animals are bears, pigs, and chimpanzees?
Omnivores.
Which of these animals has a continuous growth cycle: dogs, ladybugs, frogs?
What does not flow, does not take the shape of its container, and cannot be compressed?
Solids.
Where does the hedgehog sleep?
In a pile of leaves that's deep.
What is the more specific word we learned that means to have babies?
Reproduce or reproduction.
What are two examples of what herbivores eat?
Plants: leaves, grass, fruits, vegetables.
What is the missing stage from this growth cycle: egg, caterpillar, ........, butterfly?
Cocoon or pupa.
What flows, takes the shape of its container, and cannot be compressed?
Liquids.
Who wrote "Hibernating Hedgehog?"
Tony Mitton.
What is the more specific word we learned that means to breathe?
Respire or respiration.
If an animal has mostly pointy, sharp teeth, what kind of animal is it?
A carnivore.
Name at least two of the stages in a frog's development.
Egg, tadpole, froglet, frog.
What expands to fill a container, flows, and can be compressed?
Gas.
What do we call it when someone pronounces their S's as th's?
A lisp.