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- Pookie, Tushka, and the Blobbies receive NINE Parent to Parent Adding Wisdom Awards
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- Changing the World, One Blobbiemorpher at a Time (TD Monthly)
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- American Report: Blobbies (e-casio)
- Wah. No Fair! (Washington Post)
- ToyFair 2005! Javitz Randomness (All Nerd Review)
- Polar Fun with Pookie, Tushka (The Washington Times)
- Icelands.com Gets an A
- What Color Is Your Personality?
- The Amazing Blobbiemorphers Have Landed
- Pookie and Tushka Receive Honorable Mention for BOOK OF THE YEAR
- The Amazing Blobbiemorphers Are Coming
- Pookie and Tushka Receive a Finalist Award for BEST FIRST CHILDRENS BOOK of 2004
- The Blobbies Receive 2 Finalist Awards for BEST CHILDRENS BOOK of 2004
- Pookie and Tushka Arrive from the Icelands
- The Blobbies Have Landed
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- Presenting: The Blobbiedrive!
- The Blobbieship has landed!
- ICE FLAP PENGUIN is now available!!!
- The Winners of the Ice Math Ninja Tournament!
- Ice Math Ninja TOURNAMENT: WIN $340 in iTunes Gift Cards! - Download for FREE!!!
- ICE MATH NINJA WINS FAMILY CHOICE AWARD OF 2013
- Ice Math Ninja wins Best 10 Technology Toys of 2013
- Jorge's Adventures in the Toy Industry:
- You won't be able to stop playing Frostris!
- Jorge's Adventures in the Publishing World
- Pers Turns 10!
- Jorge on the Huffington Post
- Unlock the Power of Prime Numbers!
- Ice Math Ninja 2 is FREE today!
- Happy Valentine's Day!
- The IMN:ZERO winners are:
- Ice Math Ninja: ZERO is HERE!!!
- Game Center Contest - Win one of FIVE $15 iTunes Cards! - IMN: ZERO Launch Event
- IMN: ZERO coming Sunday December 2nd!
- IMN ZERO is on its way to the App Store!
- New IMN Addition: The Lightning Round!
- New Social Network for Ice Math Ninja
- Ice Math Ninja: Zero teaser is Here
- Introducing: Chuli!
- New Music for Ice Math Ninja: ZERO
- Preview of the Jewel Power-Up!
- Preview of the MULTIPLY Power-Up!
- Preview of the DIVIDE Power-Up!
- Sub-Zero Mines PREVIEW
- Ice Toss Frenzy Musical Update!
- The Ice Toss Frenzy Teaser is HERE!
- More Images and Music for Ice Toss Frenzy!
- Ice Toss Frenzy is coming ...
- Ice Math Ninja: ZERO is coming!
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- Pookie's Cool Facts
- Yeoman Warders are the Tower´s special guards.
- Composite volcanoes are cone-shaped.
- There are two pairs floating ribs.
- Bee and wasp stings have barbed ends to keep the sting in long enough to inject the poison.
- The platypus´s burrow can extend 100ft from the water´s edge to the nest.
- The redder and coolers a star is, the dimmer it glows.
- A thecodont´s teeth grew from roots fixed into pitlike sockets in the jawbone, as in dinosaurs.
- The first public lottery was held in Old St. Paul´s in 1569 to raise money for repairs.
- Temperate climates are mild climates in the temperate zones between the tropics and the polar regions.
- Urine is one of your body´s ways of getting rid of waste.
- Whales keep in touch with sounds called phonations.
- Koalas are the sole living representatives of their family, but are distantly related to wombats.
- The Galilean moons are the four biggest of Jupiter's moons.
- Evidence for migrating dinosaurs comes from the positions of the continents at the time.
- The gauge (track width) used for the Stockton and Darlington was 4.7 ft, the same length as axles on horse-wagons.
- In the Northern Hemisphere, winds spiral in clockwise direction out of highs, and counterclockwise into lows.
- The autonomic nervous system is the body´s third nervous system.
- Anacondas spend much of their lives in swampy ground or shallow water, lying in wait for victims to come and drink.
- The aye-aye, a close relative of the lemurs, has huge ears and can hear grubs chewing wood beneath bark.
- During the first half of each monthly cycle, the Moon waxes from a crescent-shaped new moon to a full moon.
- Cathedrals are typically built in the shape of a cross.
- Drumlins are egg-shaped mounds of till.
- Carbohydrates includes chemical substances called sugars.
- The best pearls come from the Pinctada pearls oysters that live in the Pacific Ocean.
- An elephant uses eight grinding teeth at any one time.
- The Universe is getting bigger by the second. We know this because all the galaxies are zooming away from us.
- The Gobi covers much of southern Mongolia and parts of northern China
- In electrodynamic maglevs the trains rides on repulsing magnets.
- Hot spots stay in the same place while tectonic plates slide over the top of them.
- Your digestive tract is basically a long, winding tube called the alimentary canal (gut).
- The dodo was a flightless bird that once lives on islands such as Mauritius in the Indian Ocean.
- Blind mole rats of the eastern Mediterranean have skin-covered eyes.
- The whiter and hotter a main sequence star is, the brighter it shines.
- The microscopic structure of the bones found in coprolites shows the age of the prey when it was eaten.
- In diesel mechanicals, the power is transmitted from the diesel engine to wheels via gears and shalfts.
- The Great Barrier Reef is the world´s largest living thing, 1.260 mi long.
- The amount of blood in your size. An adult who weighs 175 lb has about 10.5 pt of blood.
- Flatfish start life as normal-shaped fish. As they grow older, one eye slowly slide around the head to join the other.
- Bonobos, or oygmy chimpanzees, are found in the dense forest along the Congo River.
- Radio telescopes are telescopes that pick up radio waves instead of light waves.
- Swivel joints turn like a wheel on an axle.
- Oceanic crust is the crust beneath the oceans.
- New York City has the world´s largest subway network, but unlike London´s most of it is quite shallow.
- Tyrannosaurus is not only one of the most famous of the dinosaurs, but also one about which a great deal is known.
- Millions of insect species live in rain forest, including butterflies, month, bees, termites, and ants.
- Tunda Wolves hunt larger prey than wolves further south, and tend to be larger themselves.
- Solar eclipses are possible because the Moon is 400 times smaller than the Sun, and is also 400 times closer to the Earth.
- The epidermis is made mainly of tough protein called Keratin, the remains of skin cells that die off.
- As a sub ducting plate sinks, the continental plate scrapes sediments off the ocean plate and piles them in great wedge.
- The VW Beetle was the brainchild of the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler who wanted a cheap car to be available for all Germans.
- Cetiosaurus was about 60 ft (18 m) long and weighed 33 tons.
- The arrow-poison frogs that live in the tropical rainforest of Central America get their name because natives arrows with deadly poison from glands in the frog´skin.
- The sun bear of Southeast Asia is the word´s smallest bear, at 27-65 kg).
- Spacecraft toilets have to get rid of waste in low gravity conditions.
- Reflex reactions work by short-circuiting the brain.
- As the Earth moves a quarter of the way around the Sun, the northern half begins to tilt away.
- One of the keys to the T was standardizations.
- Ostrich-dinosaurus probaby ate seeds, fruits, and other plant material.
- The bombardier beetle squirts out a spray of liquid from its rear en, almost like a small spray gun!
- Captive raccoons appear to wash food before eating it.
- SEM specimens (things studied) must be coated in a special substance such as gold.
- The lithosphere is only a few miles thick under the middle of the oceans.
- The Flying Scotsman was a locomotive designed by Sir Nigel GResley (1876 - 1941)
- Dravidosaurus was about 10 ft (3 m) in total length.
- Short-horned grasshoppers have ears on the side of their body.
- Grizzlies are immensely strong.
- More of the chemical carbon-14 is made in Earth when the Sun is more active.
- The axial skeleton is the 80 bones of the upper body.
- When volcano with a caldera subsides, the whole cone may collapse into the old magma chamber.
- Snowmobiles are vehicles with two skis at the front. and motor-driven track roll at the back.
- The teeth of Ormitholestes were small well spaced.
- Some sedimentary rocks, such as sandstone, are made from sand and silt.
- On the back of each vertebra is a bridge called the spinal process.
- The star Denneb is 60,000 times brighter than the Sun.
- Cape hunting dog can run at 60 km/h for 5km or more.
- The glass lizard has no legs.
- Fossils of the sauropod Barapasaurus were found in India.
- In 1830 Goldsworthy Gurney put a steam engine in a coach to make the first powered bus.
- If volcanoes in subduction zones emerge in the sea, they form a curving line of volcanic islands called an island arc.
- Organs are made from combinations of tissues.
- The second largest is Saturn´s moon Titan.
- Llama herders use the animal´s fur for rugs and ropes, their hides for candles.
- Each worker bee makes ten trips a day and visits 1,000 flowers each trip.
- A typical sauropod had a tiny head, a very long neck and tail, a huge, bulging body, and four massive legs,similar to those of an elephant, but much bigger.
- The dambusters were the Lancasters of 617 squadron of 1943 that attacked German dams with ¨bouncing bombs.¨
- Rift valleys are huge, though-shaped valleys created by faulting, such as Africa´s Great Rift Valley.
- The core of some bones, such as the long bones in an arm or leg, is called bone marrow.
- Halfway out from its center to its surface, the Sun is about as dense as water.
- Badgers are enthusiactic housekeepers.
- Flukes are flatworms that live a parasites inside other animals.
- In modern science, any animal with feathers is a bird.
- The ten millionth VW Beetle was built in 1965.
- After their milk teeth have gone, shrews usually only have one set of teeth.
- On the Moon´s surface are large, dark patches called seas, becasuse that is what people once belived they were.
- Each hair is rooted in a pit called the hair follicle.
- Mantle rock is so warm that it churns slowly round like very, very thick syrup boiling on stove.
- Otters live close to water and are excellents swimmers and divers.
- Most bats sleep during the day, hanging upside down in caves, attics, and other dark places.
- Bats are not blind.
- Gorillas are the biggest of all apes, weighing up to 500 lb (225 kg) and standing as tall as 6.5 ft (2 m).
- Lemurs are small furry creatures with long tails and big eyes.
- A beaver can swim underwater for half a mile (almost 1km).
- Koalas spend 18 hours a day sleeping.
- Beavers can chop down quite large trees with their incredibly strong front teeth.
- The grizzly bear is actually a brown bear with white fur on its shoulders.
- Frogs and toads are amphibians.
- To keep hens laying, their eggs must be collected daily.
- The Andean condor of South American is a gigantic scavenger which can carry off deep and sheep.
- Sharks have a better sense of smell than any other kind of fish.
- Crocodiles live in tropical rivers and swamps.
- A spitting cobra squirts venom into its attacker's eyes, and is accurate at 6ft (2m) or more.
- When on the defensive, a cobra rears up and spreads the skin of its neck in a hood to make it look bigger.
- Frogs and toads are amphibians.
- To keep hens laying, their eggs must be collected daily.
- Bottle-nosed dolphins get their name from their short beaks, which also make them look like they are smiling.
- Crocodilian species lived alongside the dinosaurs 200 million years ago.
- Frogs are mostly smaller and better jumpers.
- Chickens were first tamed 5,000 years ago.
- Swifts may fly through the night without landing.
- Most bird's eyes look out to the sides. but an owl's look straight forward like a human's.
- The Tasmanian wolf, or thylacine, was a meat-eating Australian marsupial.
- A sloth's large stomach is divided into many compartments.
- Tenrecs evolved live on the island of Madagascar.
- Antibiotic drugs are used to treat bacterial infections such as tuberculosis (TB) or tetanus.
- On average in Europe, men can expect to live about 75 years and women about 80.
- Most people live for between 60 and 100 years.
- About 1.5 pt (0.85 l) of blood shoots through your brain every minute.
- Girl's brains weigh 2.5 percent of their body weight.
- Lemurs are small furry creatures with long tails and big eyes.
- The largest penguin at 4ft (1.2m) tall, the emperor penguin also weighs in as the heaviest seabird.
- Storks are very large black-and-white water birds with long necks and legs.
- Herons usually nest in colonies called heronries.
- When hunting, a heron stands alone in the water, often on one leg, apparently asleep.
- Female chickens and turkeys are called hens. Male chickens are called rooster or cockerels.
- In breeding season, cocks strut and puff up their plumage to attract a mate.
- The super stream-lined blue shark lives is warm seas and is 12ft (4m) in lenght.
- Herons are arge wading birds that hunt for fish in shallow rivers.
- The California condor is very rare.
- A constrictor does not crush its victims.
- There are 700 plus species of iguana, nearly all of which live in the Americas.
- Stegosaurus had a tiny skull relative to its body sie, and a brain the size of a walnut.
- Most seals eat fish, squid, and shellfish.
- The super stream-lined blue shark lives is warm seas and is 12ft (4m) in lenght.
- Because the top of the wing is curved, air pushed over the wing speeds up and stretches out.
- Insects grow by getting rid of their old exoskeleton and replacing it with a bigger one.
- Today, the only reptiles that have an almost upright posture are crocodiles and alligators.
- A prevailing wind is a wind that blows frequently from the same direction.
- The scientific word for an elephant's trunk is a proboscis.
- The vampire bats of tropical Latin America feed on blood, sucking it from animals such as cattle and horses.
- Bats find things in the dark by giving out a series of high-pitched clicks.
- Gorillas are the biggest of all apes, weighing up to 500lb (225kg) and standing as tall as 6.5ft (2m).
- Flamingos live on the shellfish and oganisms to be found in the muddy waters of the lakes, marshes, and seas where they live.
- Herons are large wading birds that hunt for fish in shallow lakes and rivers.
- A kangaroo's tail can be over 5ft (1.5m) long.
- Motor nerves are connected to your muscles and tell your muscles to move.
- Sensory nerves are the nerves that carry information to your brain from sense receptors all over your body.
- Touch, or physical contact, is just one of the five sensations that are spread all over your body in your skin.
- The back of the tongue contains big round papillae shaped like an upside-down V.
- The lens is just behind the pupil.
- Urine gets its color from a yellowish blood waste called urochrome.
- A very hot day can sometimes make us feel uncomfortable.
- Lions (along with tigers) are the biggest members of the cat family, weighing up to 500 lb (230kg).
- The polar bear has a white coat to camouflage it against the Arctic snow when it is hunting seals.
- Polar bears often swim underwater and come up under an ice floe to tip seals off.
- Most lizards lay eggs, although a few give birth to live young.
- Turtles and tortoises live to a great age.
- Siphonophores are colonies of tiny creatures that live in the deep oceans.
- Deep-sea anglerfish live deep down in the ocean where is pitch black.
- The earliest horses had four toes per foot.
- Rock wallabies live on rocky outcrops.
- The puma ranges from southern Canada through North and Central America to Patagonia in South America.
- Many small animals cope with the desert heat by resting in burrows or sheltering under stones during the day.
- Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the fall.
- Parrots have feet with two toes pointing forward and two backward, allowing them to grip branches and food.
- The peacock of India and Sri Lanka is the most spectacular of all pheasants.
- Some animals frighten off predators with coloring that makes them look much bigger.
- When drinking, a giraffe has to spread its forelegs wide or kneel down to reach the water.
- The camel's stomach is huge, with three sections.
- A tiger's stripes make it instantly recognizable, but they make good camouflage in long grass and under trees.
- Wolves are the largest wild dogs.
- Beavers build dams across streams from tree branches laid on to a base of mud and stones.
- Most birds flap their wings to fly.
- The biggest bird ever is now extinct.
- There are two Kinds of hawks.
- The Eiffel Tower, On a clear day you can see 50 mi. in all direction from the top.
- The post supporting arches are called piers.
- Flatworms look like ribbons or as though an annelid worm has been ironed flat.
- Bands of male chimpanzees have been observed attacking and killing all the males in a neighboring band.
- In the core of star, hydrogen nuclei fuse to form helium.
- Continental crust is created in the volcanic arcs above subduction zones.
- The back plates of Stegosaurus may have been for body temperature control.
- Each receptor site on a nerve ending only reacts to certain neurotransmitters.
- The Pacific has some of the greatest tides in the world.
- Uranus is only faintly visible from Earth.
- The giant pandahas an unsuccessful zoo breeding record.
- A sea urchin´s spines are used for protection.
- Pagodas are tall tapering towers often linked to Buddhist temples.
- Phagocytes are big white blood cells that swallow up invaders and then use an enzyme to dissolve them.
- The joining and separating of the continents affected which kinds of dinosaurs lived where.
- Procompsognathus was another early meat eater.
- Amylase breaks down starches such as those in bread and fruit into simple sugars.
- In the 17th century theater moved indoors or the first time.
- Most bird´s eyes look out the sides, but an owl´s look straight forward like a human´s.
- The aardwolf is a small, insect - eating member of the hyena family.
- If civilizations like ours exist elsewhere, they may be on planets circling other stars.
- Drift is a blanket of debris deposited by glaciers.
- Drift is a blanket of debris deposited by glaciers.
- In China, pagodas were belived to bring happiness to the surrounding community.
- The first motorcycle was steam-powered, and built by the Michaux brothers in 1868.
- The basic sound produced by the vocal cords is a simple "aah".
- Learning to play the violin involves nondeclarative memory, in which nerve pathways become reinforced by repeated use.
- Some scientists claim that we humans are the only living things that are conscious.
- Some PNS nerves (Peripheral Nervous System) are as wide as your thumb.
- The swordfish can swim at up to 50 mph.
- Common genets are found in France and Spain.
- The numbers of sunspots reaches a maximum every 11 years.
- A two-year flood is a smallish flood that is likely to occur every two years.
- Fossils of 50 or so Triceratops have been found in the North America.
- Metal gears appeared in 87 bc and were later used for clocks.
- The biggest hole is in the base.
- Coelophysis belonged to the group of dinosaurs know as coelurosaurs.
- The strike of the fold is at right angles to the dip.
- Hubble`s Law showed that the Universe is getting bigger, and so must have started very small.
- Capybaras mate in the water, but give birth on land.
- The red-billed quelea of Africa is the world`s most abundant bird.
- Optical microscope specimens are thinly sliced and placed between two glass slides.
- Ford U.S. introduced weekly installment plans for new cars in 1923.
- The first propeller-driven snowmobile was buit in the 1920s.
- Bodcat kittens are taught to hunt by the age of seven month.
- Hair sheep are kept for their milk and meat.
- About 4.5 bilion year ago, a rock the size of Mars crashed into the Earth.
- In the 1930 Ettore Bugatti set out to build the best car ever with the Bugatti Royale.
- when the earth was still semi-molten, dense elements such as iron sank to form the core.
- the earliest denosaurs were small-to medium meat eaters with sharp teeth and claws.
- As the Earth formed, more space debris kept on smashing into it, adding new material.
- Frogs are mostly smaller and better jumpers.
- there are five species of freshwater dolphin living in Asian and South American rivers.
- Plinian eruptions are the most explosive kind of eruption.
- Some trucks are constructed in two parts, hinged at the join.
- Sauropelta had a row of sharp spikes along each side of its body, from just behind the eye to the tail.
- All different kinds of blood cell start life in red marrow as one type of cell called a stem cell.
- Blood clots also involue a lacy, fibrous network made from a protien called fibrin.
- Huge numbers of cheek teeth, arranged in rows, filled the back of a hadrosaur´s.
- The problem with pionner helicoters was control.
- Silecate minerals are made when metals join with oxygen and silicom.
- Monotremes are egg-laying mammals.
- Most seals eat fish, squid and shellefish.
- The brain´s cortex is also known as the cerebral cortex.
- As the Earth turns, the stars come back to the same place in the nigth sky every 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.09 seconds.
- Honey bees live in hives, eigth in hollow trees or in man-made beehive boxes.
- A mature male orangutan makes his presence known to other orangutans by braking branches, bellowing and groaning.
- Radiation fog forms on cold, clear, calm nights.
- In 2004 the 200 mph Tampa-Miami Overland Express open.
- Anchisaurus was one of the smallest prosauropods, at only 8ft logn and about 65 lb (30 kg).
- The biggest hole is in the base.
- A cell is basically a little package of organic (life) chemicals with a thin menbrane (casing) of protein and fat.
- Avimimus was a small, light dinosaur.
- The electron shells of all metals are less than half-full.
- The speed of earthquake waves reveals how dense the rocky materials are.
- Horses´eyes are set high in the head and far apart, giving almost all round vision.
- Most female butterflies live only a few days, so they have to mate and lay eggs quickly.
- Through his telescope Galileo saw that Jupiter has four moons.
- Fossils of Segnosaurus were found mainly in the Gobi Deset in Central Asia in the 1970s.
- Under certain conditions atoms can be split into more tham 200 kinds of short-lived subatomic particles.
- Early churches had square towers as landmarks to be seen from afar.
- The brain´s cortex is also known as the cerebral cortex.
- Horse-drawn stagecoaches were the first regular public coach services between two or more points or stages.
- Fossil evidence shows that manatees and dugongas have existed for about 50 million years (much longer than seals).
- Many butterflies are brigthly colored and fly by day.
- Garden eels live in colonies on the seabed, poking out from holes in the sand to catch food drifting by.
- Isomers are compounds with the same atoms but different properties.
- Scientists thought that the Mediteranean was a dry desert 6 million year ago.
- The front teeth of heterodontosaurus were smal, sharp and found only in the upper jaw.
- There is no oxygen in space, and the oxidizer suppilies the oxygen needed to burn fuel.
- The appendicular skeleton is the other 126 bones; the arm and shoulder bones, and the leg and hip bones.
- Male hammer-headed bats gather together in riverside trees called, leks, so thata the females can choose a mate from among them.
- The power output of diesel engine is limited,so high-speed trains are electric.
- Air pollution is probably a major cause of global warming.
- The Kea of New Zealand is parrot that eats meat as well as fruit.
- Astatine is an unstable element that survives by itself only briefly .
- A few cycads are still found today.
- Today the standard list of nonstellar objects is the New General Catalogue of nebulae and star clusters.
- The central coronal plane divides the body into front and back halves.
- The arm is made from three long bones.
- Pterosaurs are sometimes called pterodactyls.
- Most of the less common minerals are present in rocks in minute traces.
- Most profesional astronomers do not gaze at the stars directly.
- Marsupial mouse, marsupial rat and marsupial mole are the most popular names of australian marsupials.
- Nondeclarative memories are skills you teach yourself by practicing, such as playing badminton or the flute.
- The first great book of anatomy was written in 1543 by the Flemish scientist Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564).
- The first Rolls-Royce was made by Charles Rolls and Henry Royce.
- The 540 mph (870 km/h) German Messerschmitt Me 262 was the first jet fighter.
- Black smokers are technically known as hydrothermal vents.
- Black smokers are natural chimneys on the seabed.
- Africa es the world's second larger continent.
- The Himalayas are the world's highest mountains, with 14 peaks over 26,246 ft (8,000m) high).
- In 1982 scientists in Antarctica noticed a 50 percent loss of ozone over the Antarctic every spring.
- Weight for weight, bone is at least five times as strong as steel.
- Skulls vary in size and shape.
- Ligaments are cords attached to the bones on either side of a joint.
- The liver keeps the levels of glucose in the blood steady.
- Fats are either saturated or unsaturated.
- Your vulnerable eyes are protected by tears which wash away germens.
- The thyroid is a small gland about the size of two joined cherries.
- A spider has a nervous system with about 100,000 nerve cells.
- Although air is light, there is so much of it that air can exert huge pressure at ground level.
- Each hurricane is given a name in alphabetical order each year, from a list issued by the World Meteorological Organization.
- When you are asleep, many of your body functions go on as normal,even your brain goes on receiving sense signals.
- Although each eye gives a slightly different veiw of the world, we see things largely as just one eye sees it.
- There are two kinds of light-sensitive cell in the retina: rods and cones.
- If it is too hot, the hypothalamus sends signals to your skin telling it to sweat more.
- In passive immunization you are injected with substances such as antibodies that have already been exposed to the germ.
- Long chains of molecules that slide over each other easily make highly flexible plastics such as polythene.
- In 1982 scientist in Antarctica noticed a 50 percent loss of ozone over the Antarctic every spring.
- The Earth's surface changes all the time.
- Newton was born on December 25, 1642 in Woolsthorpe in Lincoln, England.
- The Celsius (C) scale is part of the metric system of measurements and is used everywhere except in the USA.
- Oxygen is one of the most reactive elements.
- Gravity dams are very thick dams relying entirely on a huge weight of concrete to hold the water.
- The cities of Ancient Greece and Rome were often carefully laid out, with mayor public buildings.
- The Golden Gate Bridge spans the entrance to San Francisco Bay in California.
- Like all reptiles, crocodilians get their energy from the sun.
- Reindeer bulls fight with their feet and rarely with their antlers.
- Most scientists say life's basic chemicals formed on Earth.
- Moons are generally too small and their gravity is too weak to hold on to an atmosphear.
- In the past, wetlands were seen simply as dead areas, ripe for draining.
- Ice Ages are periods lasting millions of years when the Earth is so cold that the polar ice caps grow huge.
- In the tropics raindrops grow in clouds by colliding with each other.
- Marshes and swamps are found in warm and cold places.
- Tree rings can be used to tell what the weather has been like in the past.
- Hoping is a good way to travel fast.Hoping is a good way to travel fast.
- Giraffes spend much of the hot day feeding from acacia trees, shoots, fruits, and vegetacions.
- Silver is a chemical element.
- Very few elements occur naturally by themselves.
- Chemical bonds link together atoms to make molecules.
- The first all-iron brigde was at Coalbrookdale, England.
- Streetcars are buses that run on rails laid through city streets.
- Like all reptiles, crocodiles rely on basking in the sun to gain energy for hunting.
- Most of the hundreds of species of octopus live on the beds of shallow oceans around the world.
- Coral reefs are the undersea equivalent of rainforest, teeming with fish and other ocean life.
- Jellyfish float around freely, moving by squeezing water out from beneath their body.
- North America is the world's third largest continent.
- As solid rock is weathered, the hill is covered in a layer of debris called regolith.
- High up in the mountains, much of a river's energy goes into carving into the riverbed.
- The chipmunk is a squirrel-like rodent found in North America.
- Pythons are tropical snakes that live in moist forests in Asia and Africa.
- Crows use at least 300 different croaks to communicate with each other.
- Giraffes are the tallest mammals, growing to more than 16.5 ft (5 m)
- Beavers feed on bark as well as tree roots ans shrubs.
- A rodent's front teeth , called incisors grow all the time.
- Humans are one of very few land mammals to have almost bare skin.
- Frogs are mostly smaller and better jumpers.
- There are thousands of enzymes inside your body.
- You can lose salt if you sweet heavily.
- Incisors are the four pairs of teeth at the front of your mouth.
- Milk teeth are the 20 teeth that start to appear when a baby is about six month old.
- Herbivores eat for much of the time.
- Dolphins take care of each other.
- Stingrays get their name from ther whip-like tail with its poisonous barbs.
- Your body has a variety of barriers, toxic chemicals, and booby traps to stop germs from entering it.
- Urine is most water, but there are substances dissolved in it.
- The kidneys are a pair of bean-shaped organs inside the small of the back.
- Enzymes are essential for the digestion, including lipase, protease, amylase, and the peptidases.
- On average in Europe, men can expect to live about 75 years and women about 80.
- Your genes are a mixture, half come from your mother and half from your father.
- Your brain seems to have two ways of remembering things for the long term.
- During an average lifetime, the heart pumps 53 million gl (200 million lt) of blood.
- The heart is a powerful pump made almost entirely of muscle.
- Fleas and lice are small wingless insects that live on birds and mammals, including humans.
- Termite nests are built like cities with many chambers, including a garden used for growing fungus.
- Free nerveendings are sort of like the bare end of a wire.
- Part of the brain that deals with smell is linked to the parts that deals with memories and emotions
- To stay upright, your body mst send a continual stream of data about its position to your brain.
- The black of the eye is lined with millions of light-sensitive cells.
- To reach water, giraffes havo to spread their front legs wide apart.
- All lemurs live on the island af Madagascar, were they evolve in isolation.
- Rats constantly investigate their environment.
- Island fruit bats are vulnerable to tropical storms that can blow them far out to sea.
- Asian elephants are the world's longest lived mammals after humans.
- Saturn is one of the fastest spinning of all the planets.
- The Galilean moons are the four biggest of Jupiter's moons.
- Black smokers are natural chimneys on the seabed.
- Fresh snow can contain up to 90 percent air.
- People in Japan have a long life expentancy.
- The bones of a baby's skeleton are fairly soft, to allow for growth.
- By the age of 20, you will have lost 20 percent of your sense of smell.
- Each of your two eyes gives you a slightly different view of the world.
- The iris is the colored, muscular ring around the pupil.
- Termite colonies are even more complex than ant ones.
- There are 22,000 species of bee. Some like leaf-cutter bees, live alone.
- Many butterflies are brightly colored and fly by day.
- Worms are long, wriggling, tube like animals.
- A zebra's stripes are as individuals as human fingerprints.
- Aggressive hippos warn off other hippos by opening their jaws to display their tusks.
- Australia's ghost bat is the continent's only meat-eating bat.
- Isaac Newton discovered that sunlight is made of all colors mixed together.
- Most plastics are polymers.
- Vitamins D and K are the only ones made in the body.
- Fats called triglycerids are stored around the body as adipose tissue (body fat).
- Glucose is a kind of sugar made by plants as they take energy form sunlight.
- There are 20 different amino acids - your body can make 11 of them.
- Scientists call breathing "respiration".
- Milk contains a mineral called calcium, wich is essential for building strong bones.
- The immune system is the body's defense against germs.
- Most turtles and tortoises eat plants and tiny animals.
- There are 700 plus species of iguana, nearly all of wich live in the Americas.
- Frogs and toads are meat eaters.
- There are about 3,500 species of frog and toad.
- Irregular galaxies are galaxies with no obvious shape.
- Power stations do not create energy.
- The elephant's large ears help it to control its temperature, as well as aiding its sense of hearing
- An elephant's trunk is a combination of upper lip and nose, and is used to place food into its mouth
- To reach water, giraffes have to spread their front legs wide apart.
- The Australian numbat is the only marsupial adapted to feed exclusively on ants and termites.
- Bats produce high-pitched sounds that cannot be heard by humans or other animals.
- The Golden Gate Bridge is one of the world's largest suspension bridges.
- In North America, beavers were once hunted so much that they were almost wiped out.
- Mice and rats belong to a group of 1,800 specie of small mammals called rodents.
- Koalas spend 18 hours a day sleeping.
- Like kangaroos, koalas are marsupials.
- Fur and fat protect mammals from the cold.
- Stellar's sea eagle is one of the most powerful of all birds.
- Energy goes on flowing from high to low until there is no difference to make anything happen.
- Energy that turns into heat may not be lost.
- Our main sources of natural light are th Sun and the stars.
- The name "koala" comes from an Aboriginal word meaning "no drink".
- African buffaloes gather together in herds of over 2,000.
- Newborn kangaroos are deaf as well asa naked and blind.
- Unlike other mammals, camels have oval instead of round bloodcells.
- The white cells made in bone marrow play a key part in the body's immune system.
- Your body is mostly water. Bones contains one-fifth water, while your brain is three-quarters water.
- About one-fifth of all deserts are seas of sand dunes.
- A baby elephant is fed by its mother for two years.
- Lion cubs are taken care of by several females until they are big enough to fend for themselves.
- The Tower of London is the oldest stone castle in London, started in 1066.
- Rope suspension bridges have been used for thousands of years.
- The cornea is a thin, glassy dish across the front of your eye.
- Rats are among the world's most successful mammals.
- Halogens are the chemical elements fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
- The huge bulge at the center of the Milky Way is about 20,000 light-years across and 3,000 thick.
- The visible surface layer of the Sun is called photosphere.
- The Sun is a medium-sized star measuring 864,948 mi (1,392,000 km) across.
- The space shuttle uses a huge fuel tank and two booster rockets to launch.
- Rope suspension bridges have been used for thousands of years.
- The friction that stops things starting to slide is called static friction.
- The largest-known wild lion was an African male, weighing 690 lb (313 kg).
- Meerkats live in groups of up to 30 individuals in a complex warren system.
- Some whales communicate with complex "songs".
- Many mammals carry their young around with them.
- Only a few animal species are true hibernators.
- Horses' eyes are set high in the head and far apart, giving almost all round vision.
- The koala will spend almost all of its life in eucaliptus trees.
- Hydrogen is one of the most reactive gases.
- Declination is like latitude.
- The first dinosaur eggs ever discovered were from Protoceratops.
- Tyrannosaurus may have taken between 20 and 50 years to reach adult size.
- Stegosaurus had the smallest known brain for its body size of any dinosaur.
- Drought bakes the soil so hard it shrinks and cracks.
- Clouds are the visible, liquid part of the moisture in the air.
- Giraffes are the tallest mammals, growing to more than 16.5 ft (5m).
- Tigers are the largest of the big cats, with huge heads.
- Sea otters will float on their backs for hours, eating or sleeping.
- Most bats sleep during the day, hanging upside down in caves, attics, and other dark places.
- Monkeys live mostly in trees, their hands have fingers and their feet toes for gripping branches.
- Arteries run alongside most of the veins that return blood to the heart.
- Planetary nebulae are thin rings of gas cloud which are thrown out by dying stars.
- The amount of heat reaching the ground depends on the angle of the Sun's rays.
- Arabian camels have one hump and live mainly in the Sahara desert and the Middle East.
- An owl's big eyes face straight forward to focus on an object.
- Geese mostly graze on grass.
- Frogs are superb jumpers, with long back legs to propel them into the air.
- Much livelier than the giant panda, the red panda is a nimble climber.
- To start moving, a skater uses the force of his muscles to push against the ground.
- Energy cannot be reused once has turned to heat and dissipated.
- The sun throws out huge quantities of radiation of all kinds.
- Barometers are used to detect changes in air pressure.
- Wind is moving air.
- Rain falls from clouds filled with large water drops and ice crystals.
- Amphibians are animals that live both on land and in water.
- Bees and wasps are narrow-waisted insects, usually with hairy bodies.
- Many minerals are made as magma cools.
- Amphibians are animals that live both on land and in water.
- Bees and wasps are narrow-waisted insects, usually with hairy bodies.
- Many minerals are made as magma cools.
- Seen from earth, the stars in a constellation appear to be the same distance away.
- Electricity is the energy that makes everything from toasters to televisions work.
- Candle wax contains a mixture of carbon and hydrogen.
- The Periodic Table is a chart of all the 100-plus different chemical elements.
- The colugo (also known as a flying lemur) is about the size of a domestic cat.
- Kangaroos are not restricted to Australia.
- Fats are greasy foods that will not dissolve in water.
- The four rearmost molars, one in each back corner of each jaw, are the wisdom teeth.
- If you sweat a lot during heavy excercise, you need to make up for all the water lost by drinking.
- The remains of Pompeii were discovered in the 18th century, wonderfully preserved under feet of ash.
- Earthquake prediction methods detect distortions of the ground that indicate the rock is under stres
- Seismologists make accurate surveys with ground instruments and laser beams bounced off satellites.
- Small flood are common; big flood are rare.
- Drought bakes the soil so hard it shrinks and cracks.
- Skunks are great diggers.
- When raindrops fall through sunlight they act as prisms.
- Electromagnetic radiation is pure energy.
- Many synthetic materials are polymers.
- Constellations are patterns of stars.
- Unlike other outer planets, Pluto is made from rock.
- Mercury is a planet of yellow dust, as deeply dented with craters as the Moon.
- North America is the oldest continent on the Earth.
- North America broke away from Europe about 100 million years ago.
- Earthquakes can begin as much as 435 mi (700 km) below the Earth's surface.
- The heart is a remarkable double pump, with two pumping chambers, the left and the right ventricles.
- Capillaries are the smallest vessels, only visible under a microscope.
- In old age the artery walls can become very stiff.
- As adults grow older, their bodies begin to deteriorate.
- Pollen can often cause allergies like hayfever.
- Microphones pick up sound wave and turn them into electrical signals.
- Pierre and Marie Curie were the scientist who discovered the nature of radioactivity.
- Black panthers are leopards with back pigmentation.
- Snow leopards, which inhabit the mountains of Central Asia, have never been know to roar.
- The polar bear is the only bear which is almost exclusively a meat-eater.
- The donkey evolved from African ass ancestors, and is capable of carrying heavy loads.
- Strong and healthy new born lambs are on their feet within minutes.
- The giraffe is the world's tallest animal.
- The South American capybara is the world's largest roedent.
- Many tropical bats, which eat pollen and nectar are important pollinators of plants.
- The celestial sphere is like a great blue ball dotted with stars, with the Earth in the middle.
- Mars' surface is cracked by a valley called the Vallis Marineris.
- Most of the nine planets in our Solar System have been known since ancient times.
- European and Asian reindeer have mainly gray topcoats, with fawn legs.
- Your vulnerable eyes are protected by tears which wash away germs.
- Doctors can get clues to illnesses by testing what substances there are in urine.
- The ancient Greeks realized that the Earth is a globe.
- The lithosphere is the upper, rigid layer of the Earth.
- Paleontologists tell the age of a fossil from the rock layer in which it is found.
- Laser light is a bright artificial light. It creates an intense beam that can punch a hole in steel.
- Steel ships float because although stell is denser than water, their hulls are full of air.
- Energy is measured in joules (J).
- The rhino has one or two horns, depending on species, perched on a tough area of the skull.
- A koala weighs less than 0.2 oz at birth, and remains in its mother's pouch for 7 months.
- Hippos are probably Africa's most dangerous animal.
- Horses have a very strong homing instincts.
- The more of the Sun's energy there is in the air, the windier it is.
- The more of the Sun's energy there is in the air, the windier it is.
- Pluto is tiny in comparison to the Earth, which is why it was so hard to find.
- Pluto was the last of all the planets to be discovered.
- Manatees and dugongs, known as sirenian, are the only vegetarian sea mammals in the world.
- The chipmunk is one of the most common small mammals in North America.
- The Wright brothers, Orville and Wilbur, built the world's first successful plane, the Flyer.
- The biggest and strongest steam locomotives ever were nicknamed "Big Boy".
- Vaccination is also called immunization, it builds up your resistance or immunity to a disease.
- The Apollo 13 mission to the Moon suffered near tragedy when an explosion ripped through one module.
- All river channels tend to wind, and the nearer they are to sea level, the more they wind.
- As temperature rises, solids melt to become liquids.
- Glass is one of the most versatile materials, transparent, easily molded, and resistant to weather.
- Velociraptor lived 75-70 million years ago, in what is now the barren scrub and desert of Mongolia.
- The arms and hands of Tyrannosaurus were so small that they could not pass food to its mouth.
- If you sweat a lot during excersice, you need to make up for all the water you have lost by drinking
- Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) was a great Italian mathematician and astronomer.
- The world's climate is changing all the time, getting warmer, colder, wetter, or drier.
- The air is not warmed much by the Sun directly.
- The chemicals involved in a chemical reaction are called the reactants.
- Light is just one of the forms of electromagnetic radiation.
- Light is a form of energy.
- Troikas are Russian sleighs (or carriages) drawn by three horses.
- The first bicycle was the 1818 "draisienne" of Baron de Drais.
- An echo is the reflection of a sound.
- To convert Celsius to Fahrenheit, divide by 5, multiply by 9 and add 32.
- Seismic gaps are places in active earthquake zones where there has been no earthquake activity.
- Tectonic plates are moving all the time, by about 4 in (10 cm) a year.
- W. A. Bentley was an American farmer who photographed thousands of snowflakes through microscopes.
- The vocal cords are soft flaps in the larynx, situated at the base of the throat.
- The first U.S. space station was Skylab.
- Quasars are the most distant known objects in the Universe.
- Baby porcupines are born with soft quills to make the birth easier.
- Baby big cats are called cubs.
- Only male lions have a mane, which shows off their size, and also protects them during fights.
- Like us, apes have long arms, and fingers and toes for gripping.
- A reptile's skin looks slimy, but it is quite dry.
- Deserts suffer from permanent drought.
- A drought is a long period when there is too little rain.
- Essentials oils are thin, perfumed oils from plants.
- Iron is never found in its pure form in the Earth's crust.
- Most spiders have a poisonous bite which they use to stun or kill they prey.
- Eels are long, slimy fish that look like snakes.
- The Sun can be used to generate electricity.
- Hamada is desert that is strewn with boulders.
- The Moon's landscape has barely changed over billion of years.
- Molars are the (usually) six pairs of big, strong teeth at the back of your mouth.
- Water drops and ice crystals in thunderclouds are buffeted together.
- Snow is often slow to melt after it has covered the ground.
- The world's biggest fish is the whale shark, which can grow to well over 40 ft (12 m) long.
- Sheep were first domesticated over 10,000 years ago.
- The time from mating to birth is called the gestation period.
- Birds of prey lay only one or two eggs at a time.
- The heartbeat is the regular squeezing of the heart muscle to pump blood around the body.
- The study of the shape of the Earth is called geodesy.
- Antarctic icebergs last for ten years on average.
- The Age of Dinosaurs came to a fairly sudden end 65 million years ago.
- Spiders are hunters and most of them feed mainly on insects.
- Whales, dolphins, and porpoises are large mammals called cetaceans.
- Constrictors usually swallow victims whole, then spend days digesting them.
- Motor nerves cross over from one side of your body to the other at the top of your spinal cord.
- Lack of sleep can be dangerous. A newborn baby needs to 18 to 20 hours sleep a day.
- The thyroid secretes three important hormones: tri-iodothyronine, thyroxine, and calcitonin.
- Blood carries oxygen and food to body cells, and takes carbon dioxide and other waste away.
- The nucleus of an atom is made up of two kinds of particle: protons and neutrons.
- Oxygen is the second most plentiful element on Earth, making up 46 percent of the Earth's crust.
- Oils are liquids that do not dissolve in water and burn easily.
- The body's thirst center is the hypothalamus.
- The leopard is by far the best climber of the big cats.
- The bumblebee bat of Thailand is the world's smallest mammal.
- Most streams in deserts flow only occasionally, leaving dry stream beds called wadis or arroyos.
- The people of the Ice Age risked their lives to hunt the fierce woolly mammoth.
- Like reptiles today, dinosaurs had claws or similar hard structures at the ends of their digits.
- The full name of Tyrannosaurus is Tyrannosaurus Rex, which means "king of the tyrant reptiles".
- Your spinal cord is about 17 in (43 cm) long and 0.4 in (1 cm) thick.
- SETI is the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence.
- Observatories are special places where astronomers study space.
- Pandas have an inefficient digestive system.
- Reindeer are the only deer in which both male and female have antlers.
- A beaver signals danger by smacking the water with its tail.
- Sharks have a skeleton made of rubbery cartilage.
- Sharks have a skeleton made of rubbery cartilage.
- Giant planets have now been detected orbiting stars other than the Sun.
- Sir Isaac Newton was one of the greatest scientists.
- Energy is never lost nor gained; it simply moves or changes.
- Proteins are needed to build and repair cells.
- Normal pulse rates vary between 50 and 100 beats a minute.
- The cardiovascular system is the heart and the blood circulation.
- Milk and its products, such as butter and cheese, are key sources of calcium.
- Quasars are extremely lumious objects at the center of some distant galaxies.
- The coldest places in the world are the North and South Poles.
- One definition of a hill is high ground up to 1,007 ft (307 m) high.
- Wetlands are areas of land where the water level is mostly above the ground.
- Rockets work by burning fuel.
- The wrist is one of the best places to test the pulse.
- In deep water tsunamis travel almost unnoticeably below the surface.
- An ecosystem is a community of living things interacting with each other and their surroundings.
- Antarctica is one of the driest places on Earth, with barely any rain or snow.
- Advection fog forms when warm, moist air flows over a cold surface.
- Auroras are bright displays of shimmering light.
- Galaxies are often found in groups called clusters.
- Metals are usually shiny.
- Coordination means balanced or skillful movement.
- Sea anemones are tiny, meat-eating animals that look a bit like flowers.
- Beavers are large rodents with flat, paddle-like tails.
- Hydrocarbons are compounds made only of carbon and hydrogen atoms.
- Temperature is how hot or cold something is.
- Copper is one of the few metals that occur naturally in a pure form.
- Atoms are tiny particles that build together to make every substance.
- Animals sense the world in a variety of ways, including by sight, hearing, touch, smell, and taste.
- Otters are small hunting mammals that are related to weasels.
- Cumulus clouds are fluffy white clouds.
- Oases are places in the desert that have water supplies.
- Astrologers believe that the movements of planets and stars have an effect on people's life.
- Constellations are simple patterns.
- Most lights in the sky are stars.
- Meteoroids are the billions of tiny lumps of rocky material that hurtle around the Solar System.
- Rain falls from clouds filled with large water drops and ice crystals.
- Most fuels are chemicals called hydrocarbons.
- Camels sweat very little, to save moisture.
- Monkeys from the Americas live in trees and often have muscular tails that can grip like a hand.
- Flamingoes are large pink wading birds which live in huge colonies on tropical lakes.
- When you remember something, your brain probably stores it by creating new nerve connections.
- The motor cortex is a band just in front of the sensory cortex.
- The solar system has nine planets including Pluto.
- The first space station was the Soviet Salyut 1, launched in April 1971.
- Vicuñas can live at altitudes of 18,000 ft (5,486 m), where the air is too thin for most mammals.
- The sloths of South America has the most neck vertebrae of any mammal.
- The spinal cord is the bundle of nerves running down the middle of the backbone.
- Diplodocus was a huge plant-eating dinosaur belonging to the group known as the sauropods.
- Antarctica is the ice-covered continet at the South Pole.
- Like clouds, mist is billions of tiny water droplets floating on the air.
- The biggest problem when lauching a spacecraft is overcoming the pull of Earth's gravity.
- Some planets, called terrestrial planets, have a surface of solid rock.
- Nebula was the word once used for any fuzzy patch of light in the night sky.
- The Taj Mahal in Agra in India is perhaps the most beautiful tomb in the world.
- Although galaxies are vast, they are so far away that they look like fuzzy clouds.
- The world's highest great lake is Lake Titicaca in South America (Perú).
- South America is the world's fourth largest continent.
- Global warming is the increase in average temperatures around the world.
- Meteorologist define fog as mist thats reduces visibility to less than 0.6 mi (1 km).
- Sometimes the folds are just tiny wrinkles a few inches long.
- Ant colonies are all female, most species have one or several queens which lay the eggs.
- Unlike humans, birds do not give birth to babies.
- Marrow is the soft, jelly-like tissue in the middle of certain bones.
- Cartilage is a rubbery substance used in various places around the body.
- Reflexes are muscle movements that are automatic.
- The Earth is one of the rocky planets, along with Mercury, Venus, and Mars.
- Moons are the natural satellites of planets.
- Your body loses heat as you breathe in cool air and breathe out warm air.
- Fats are important organic (life) substances, found in almost every living thing.
- Glaciers form when new snow falls on top of old snow.
- The most spectacular caves, called caverns, are found in limestone.
- The magnetic field around a planet or a star is called the magnetosphere.
- Medium-sized stars last for about ten billions years.
- Mars is the nearest planet to Earth after Venus.
- If you drink a lot, the saltiness of the blood is diluted.
- In active immunization you are given a killed or otherwise harmless version of the germ.
- Some dinosaurs left footprints when they walked on the soft mud or sand of riverbanks.
- Sharks are the most fearsome predatory fish of the seas.
- Dolphins communicate with high-pitched clicks called phonations.
- Crocodiles are often said to cry after eating their victims.
- Crocodilians are hunters that lie in wait for animals coming to drink at he water's edge.
- Some creatures mimic the colors of poisonous ones to warn predators off.
- There are around 17 different species of penguin.
- Elements are the basic chemicals of the Universe.
- Solar flares are sudden eruptions on the Sun's surface.
- Lava is hot molten rock from the Earth's interior.
- Most minerals are combinations of two or more chemical elements.
- The ribs are the thin, flattish bones that curve around your chest.
- Ligaments are cords attached to bones on either side of a joint.
- An arteriole is a smaller branch off an artery.
- Camels can go many days or even months without water.
- Tigers usually live alone, and males try to keep other males out of their territory.
- The bold coloring of the ladybug warns birds that it is not for eating.
- When in danger an octopus may send out a cloud of inky black fluid.
- Asteroids are lumps of rock that orbit the Sun.
- Calcium is a soft, silvery white metal.
- The Earth's surface is divided into slabs called tectonic plates.
- Air pollution can spread huge distances.
- Migration is when animals move from one place to another.
- Owls have huge eyes that allow them to see in almost pitch darkness.
- Why is the sand wet?
- Hippopotamuses are big, gray, pig-like creatures that live in Africa.
- Winter weather is cold because days are too short to give much heat.
- Caves are giant holes that run horizontally underground.
- Earthquakes are a shaking of the ground.
- The Arctic fox has incredibly thick fur to keep out the cold.
- Gray wolves often go for a week without food.
- Some porcupines collect bones, which they gnaw on to sharpen their teeth.
- Raptors is a nickname for the dromeosaur group.
- Butterflies are insects with four large wings.
- Ants are a vast group of insects related to bees and wasps.
- The Incas used llamas to carry secret messages tied into their fur.
- The name "elephant" means "visible from afar".
- Carbohydrates are foods made from kinds of sugar, such as glucose and starch.
- Tendon provided a link between muscle and bone.
- The vertebrae are separated by disks of rubbery material called cartilage.
- The skull looks as though it is a single bone.
- Seasons are periods in a year that bring changes in weather and temperature.
- Despite their name starfish are not fish.
- There are about ten species of barn owl.
- Mars's volcano Olympus Mons is the biggest in the solar system.
- Planets are never more than 20 percent of the size of their star.
- There are three kinds of spacecraft.
- Hurricans last, on average, 3 to 14 days.
- Your skeleton is a rigid framework of bones.
- At the center of the cell is the nucleus, this is the cell control center.
- The Patagonian puma has a hunting territory of up to 40 sq mi (100 sq km).
- The moon orbits the Earth once every month, with each orbits taking 27.3 days.
- Each atmosphere is very different.
- No other planet in the solar system has water on its surface.
- North America is the world's third largest continent.
- A molecule is two or more atoms bonded together.
- Light is just one of the forms of electromagnetic radiation.
- Apes are our closest relatives in the animal world.
- Birds have four kinds of wing feather: large primaries, smaller secondaries, coverts, and contours.
- Lizards cannot control their own body heat, and so rely on sunshine for warmth.
- Spiders are small scurrying creatures which have eight legs, and bodies with two parts.
- Stars are being born and dying all over the Universe.
- The oldest known rocks on Earth are 3,900 millions years old.
- Volcanic eruptions are produced by magma, the hot liquid rock under the Earth's surface.
- Groups of common dolphins, travelling and feeding together, may number up to 2,000 individuals.
- A chameleon can look forward and backward at the same time.
- Boas capture their prey by lying in wait, hiding motionless, and waiting for victims to pass by.
- Eagles and hawks are among 280 species of raptor (bird of prey).
- The Richter scale measures the magnitude of an earthquake on a scale of 1 to 10 using a seismograph.
- The atmosphere is a blanket of gases about 600 mi (1,000 km) deep around the Earth.
- About 100 artificial satellites are now launched very year.
- Astronauts must be extremely fit and also have very good eyesight.
- A tiger's stripes camouflage it as it hunts in the tall grasses by day.
- Wolves howl to avoid territorial fights.
- The giraffe's black tongue is almost 1.6 ft (0.5 m) long.
- You gain water by drinking and eating, and as a by-product of cell activity.
- The Moon is the brightest object in the night sky, but it does not give out any light itself.
- An atmosphere is the gases held around a planet by its gravity.
- A planet moves fastest when its orbits brings it nearest to the Sun (called its perihelion).
- The tiny atoms and molecules from which every substance is made are always moving.
- Like all sounds, musical sounds are made by something vibrating.
- Constrictors are snakes that squeeze their victims to death, rather than poisoning them.
- The heart of a star reaches 60.8 million ·F (16 millions ·C).
- Glaciers are rivers of slowly moving ice. They form in mountain regions when it is too cold for snow
- The South American jaguar is America's only big cat.
- Leopards have survived successfully because they will eat almost anything, from crabs to baboons.
- Before spraying, a skunk warns its enemy by stamping its feet.
- Beneath its thick white fur, a polar bear's skin is black.
- The technical name for going outside a spacecraft is Extra-Vehicular-Activity (E.V.A.)
- Veins are pipes in the body for carrying blood back to the heart.
- Astronomers list the stars according to their brightness, using the Greek alphabet.
- One of the biggest - ever eruptions occurred 2.2 millions years ago in Yellowstone.
- Waterfalls may form where the river flows over a band of hard rock, such as a volcanic sill.
- Crocodiles, alligators, caimans, and gharials are reptiles that form the group known as crocodilians
- Ducks have shorter necks and wings, and flatter bills than swans.
- Parrots are colorful birds with curved bills for eating fruits and seeds and for craking nuts.
- A transfusion is when you are given blood from another person's body.
- Fats are an important source of energy.
- A galaxy is a vast group of stars, and the Milky Way is the galaxy we live in.
- Comets are bright objects with long tails, which we sometimes see streaking across the night sky.
- Male lions have the job of protecting the pride, leaving the hunting to the females most of the time
- Mountain lions are the largest American desert carnivores.
- Beavers are born with innate dam-building instincts.
- Touch, is just one of the five sensations that are spread all over your body in your skin.
- Uranus is the seventh planet out from the sun.
- Owls are nocturnal and hunt by night, unlike most other hunting birds.
- The dog family is a large group of four-legged, long-nosed, meat-eating animals.
- Insects have a body divided into three sections: which is why they are called insects "in sections"
- Vehicles designed to move on snow are supported on flat boards called runners, skids, or skis.
- New York's Statue fo Liberty stands on Liberty Island off the tip of Manhattan.
- An artery is a tubelike blood vessel that carries blood away from the heart.
- Carbohydrates in food are your body's main source of energy.
- Octopuses and squid belong to a family of mollusks called cephalopods.
- Turtles and tortoise are reptiles that live inside hard, armored shells.
- Friction is the force that acts between two things rubbing together.
- Most sounds you hear, from the whisper of the wind to the roar of a jet, are simply moving air.
- Elements are the basic chemicals of the Universe.
- Your heart is the size of you fist.
- Most birds sit on their eggs to keep them warm until they are ready to hatch.
- Vultures and condors are the biggest birds of prey.
- Reptiles are cold-blooded, but this does not mean that their blood is cold.
- Things float because they are less dense in water.
- Hydrogen is the lightest of all gases and of all elements.
- Nuclear power is based on the huge amounts of energy that bind together the nucleus of every atom.
- Many fish species live in warm seas around coral reefs.
- Your diet is what you eat.
- Blood transfusions are given when someone has lost too much blood due to an injury or operation.
- Cells are the basic building blocks of your body.
- Anatomy is the study of the structure of the human body.
- Hundreds of kinds of dinosaur were herbivores, or plant eaters.
- Dinosaur claws were probably made from keratin.
- Body salts are not simply the salt (sodium chloride) some people sprinkle on food.
- Cathedrals are the churches of Christian bishops.
- Satellite are objects that orbit planets and other space objects.
- Radiation is energy shot out at high speed by atoms.
- Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) discovered the basic rules about the way the planets move.
- Marsupials probably originated in America some 100 millions years ago.
- Chimps have a strict social ladder, with dominant male at the top.
- Indian ruler Shah Jehan ordered to build the Taj Mahal in honor of his favorite wife Mumtaz Mahal.
- A kind of jet engine was built by the Ancient Greek Hero of Alexander in the first century AD.
- The Korean War oh the 1950s saw the first major combat between jet fighters.
- Unlike most cats, cheetahs can hardly retract their claws at all.
- In wolf packs, only the dominant female normally mates and has cubs.
- Reindeer have a well developed homing instintic.
- The skunk squirts a sticky spray at its enemy from glands under its tail.
- The American kangaroo rat may never take a drink of water in its life.
- Elephants are very intelligent animals, with the biggest brain of all land animals.
- Not all birds can fly, but they all have feathers.
- Reptiles are scaly-skinned animals which live in many different habitats mainly in warm regions.
- Astronomy is the study of the night sky, from the planets and moons to the stars and galaxies.
- Space telescopes are launched as satellites so we can study the Universe.
- Mars is called the red planet because of its rusty red color.
- The heartbeat is a sequence called the cardiac cycle.
- Vitamins are substances the body needs to help maintain chemical processes inside cells.
- It takes less than 90 seconds on average for the blood to circulate through the body.
- An adult's skeleton has 206 bones joined together by rubbery cartilage.
- Pyramids are found not only in Egypt.
- The world's largest airport is King Abdul Aziz in Saudi Arabia. It covers 55,500 acres.
- In 1905 most cars were "coach-built" which meant they were individually built by hand.
- Female domestic dogs can have two litters of puppies a year.
- Some dogs can sense when their owner is about to have an epileptic fit.
- St Bernard rescue dogs work in teams of three.
- If there has been no earthquake in an earthquake zone for a while, there will be one soon.
- Earthquake waves are the vibrations sent out through the ground by earthquakes.
- The Earth is not a perfect sphere.
- Astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped on to the Moon for the first time on July 20, 1969.
- Payload specialist are not NASA astronauts.
- Spacecrafts toilets have to get rid of the waste in low gravity conditions.
- Dinosaurs may have made sounds to keep in touch with other members of their herd.
- Tropical bats are important pollinators of plants, including some trees.
- Rats are among the world's most successful mammals.
- The snow leopard is also known as the ounce.
- Crocodiles often swallow stones.
- Space suits protect astronauts when they go outside their aircraft.
- Damage to the spinal cord can cause paralysis.
- The majority of dinosaur fossils have been found in North America.
- Europe is the smallest continent.
- Gravity on the Moon's surface is only one-sixth as strong as on Earth.
- The Nazca Lines in Perú, are only clearly seen from the air.
- European domestic cattle are descended from the aurochs.
- Small owls eat mostly insects.
- Life on Earth probably began 3,800 million years ago.
- A baby's brain is one of the fastest growing parts of its body.
- The Diplodocus had the longest tail.
- Three-quarters of South America is in the tropics.
- All light comes from Atoms.
- Versailles is perhaps the most expensive palace ever built.
- The domestic horse is the only member of the horse family in which the mane falls to the side.
- The distance to the Moon is measured with a laser beam.
- Humans are among the few animals that mate at any time of the year.
- Digestion is the process of breaking down food into substances that can be used by the body.
- Gastroliths were stones that dinosaurs swallowed into their stomachs to help with their digestion.
- The Earth was formed about 4.57 thousand million years ago.
- Optical microscopes use lenses to magnify images up to 2,000 times.
- The biggest Spanish galleons weighted over 1,000 tons.
- Hares are born with fur, with their eyes open.
- Fleas jump with over 20 times the force required to launch a space rocket.
- Jupiter has no surface for a spacecraft to land on.
- Tendons are cords that tie a muscle to a bone or to another muscle.
- The biggest dinosaurs were the sauropods.
- In 1645 BC the Greek island of Thera erupted.
- Electromagnetism is the combined effect of electricity and magnetism.
- Supersonic planes travel faster than the speed of sound.
- A Cheetah can accelerate from 0 to 45 mph (72 km/h) in 2 seconds.
- Meteors are space objects that crash into Earth's atmosphere.
- When you exercise, your body burns up energy faster.
- Bats are the only flying mammals.
- No one knows for sure how long dinosaurs lived.
- Rivers carve out valleys as they wear away their channels.
- Iron is the most common element in the world.
- China developed its own distinctive style of building over 3,000 years ago.
- Most penguins only take short naps.
- Penguins can be found anywhere in the Southern Hemisphere where there are cold ocean currents
- Penguins have salt-filtering glands
- The Emperor penguin is the largest of all the penguins.
- Penguins are densely feathered.
- Some penguins reproduce in the Antartic during the winter.
- Penguins spend up to 75% of their life in the water.
- The polar bear's favorite food is seals.
- Female polar bears may go without eating for up to 8 months.
- Penguins and Polar Bears live in opposite ends of the world.
- The Moon's gravity is 17 percent of Earth's.
- Protective coloring helps an animal hide from its enemies or warns them away.
- Dinosaurs had scales, like today's reptiles.
- The Earth's crust is a thin hard outer shell of rock.
- Archimedes was one of the first great scientists.
- When you heat a substance its molecules move faster.
- The earliest known dam was built in Egypt.
- The earliest-known ancestor of the horse, was the size of a small dog.
- Genes are the body's chemical instructions for your entire life.
- More than 70 percent of all bird species are perching birds.
- The Earth takes 365.24219 days to orbit the Sun.
- In 1201 an earthquake rocked every city in the easter Mediterranean.
- Fossils suggest that dinosaurs could have made a variety of sounds.
- Radiation is an atom's way of getting rid of its excess energy.
- The American plane Voyager flew around the world non-stop in nine days.
- The American least weasel is the world's smallest carnivore
- The Central Nervous System is made up of the brain and the spinal cord
- All birds begin life as eggs
- Binaries stars are double stars
- In 1996, an ozone hole appeared over the Arctic for the first time
- Edmontosaurus probably made trumpeting noises
- Sounds over 130 dB (decibels) are painful
- Bus is short for "omnibus"
- The black rat spread the bubonic plague in Europe
- The liver is your body's chemical processing center
- Dolphins are mammals, not fish
- Water is the only substance on Earth which is commonly found as a solid, a liquid, and a gas
- A hurricane generates the same energy every second as a small hydrogen bomb
- Nodosaurs were armored dinosaurs that lived 150-65 million years ago
- Energy cannot be destroyed, but it can be burned up
- The Inca people of Perú domesticated llamas and alpacas
- The world's biggest dam is in Russia
- A baby's head is 1/4 of its total body weight
- The bluefin tuna can grow to up to 12 feet (4 meters) in length
- The first artificial satellite was the Sputnik 1
- Mount Wai-'ale-'ale, in Hawaii, is the world's rainiest place
- Before the 1820's people didn't know that dinosaurs existed
- Albert Einstein was the most influential scientist of the 20th century
- Elephants once lived in the Sahara
- The Saturn V rocket is the most powerful rocket ever built
- There are over 5 million color-detecting cones in the retina of each eye
- Most poisonous insects are brightly colored
- Dwarf stars are small stars of low brightness
- Smog is a thick fog
- The smallest fossil dinosaur found to date are of the Mussaurus
- All solids are slightly elastic
- Raccoon skin was used as money
- Railroads were invented long before steam power
- The eyes are tough balls that are filled with a jelly-like substance
- Reptiles were the first large creatures to live entirely on land
- Heroes and creatures of greek myth provided the names for many constellations.
- A flood occurs when a river or the ocean rises so much that it spills over the land.
- Fossils are the remains of once-living things that have been preserved in rocks.
- Four fundamental forces operate throughout the Universe
- Lemmings will cross any water in their path as they migrate
- Prehistoric humans rarely lived in caves
- The sense of taste is the crudest of our five senses
- Most lizards can change colors
- Planets begin life at the same time as their star
- The word "volcano" comes from Vulcano Island
- "Kentrosaurus" means "spiky reptile"
- No clock keeps perfect time
- Ants have very strong jaws
- Blood can be either Rhesus positive (Rh+) or Rhesus negative (Rh-)
- There are 4 main types of blood
- The Akashi-Kaikyo bridge is the world longest suspension bridge
- The large meat-eating dinosaurs where knows as "carnosaurs"
- A flash of lightning is brighter than 10 million 100-watt light bulbs
- Hovercrafts can travel over land or water
- A supernova is the explosion of dying supergiant star
- The box jellyfish has one of the deadliest poison
- Newborn babies breathe about 40 times a minute
- Anteaters have no teeth
- Chromosomes carry your body's life instructions
- Galaxies are giant groups of stars
- Castles were fortress homes of powerful men.
- The longest cave system is the Mammoth Cave
- Dinosaurs lived in the Mesozoic Era
- A song can shatter glass
- Bears are omnivores
- The Andes is the world's longest mountain range
- The Iguanodon was one of the first dinosaurs to be given a name
- Sound travels a million times slower than light
- The Basilisk lizard can walk on water
- There are 33 vertebrae in the spine
- The most powerful rocket ever was the Saturn 5
- Europe only has one type of primate
- Electricity is made by electrons
- The world's largest earthworm is 7 yards (6.5 meters) long
- Sunspots are dark spots on the Sun's surface
- All living things are based on carbon
- Tigers eat a variety of foods
- Vaccination prevents disease
- The Parasaurolophus had the longest head crest
- Bronze is the oldest of all alloys
- The giant flying squirrel performed the longest glide ever recorded
- The largest pyramid is the Great Pyramid of Giza
- Your brain gets millions of nerve signals every second
- The male emperor penguin hatches eggs
- The city of Benxi used to be called a "city invisible from satellites"
- The world's first airport was built in 1928
- Stars are basically balls of burning gas
- Mass is the amount of matter in an object
- Giant and Red Pandas have an extra "thumb"
- All your body is made from tissue and tissue fluid
- The Quetzalcoatlus was the largest flying animal ever
- Peacocks were considered treasures
- The biggest eruption in the past 50 years occurred in the Philippines
- The Lunar 9 was the first vehicle to land on the Moon
- The Colosseum was a sports arena built in ancient Rome
- Horns were most common among the plant-eating dinosaurs
- Most volcanoes are found around the Pacific Ocean
- Mercury is nearest planet to the Sun
- Bats emit high-frequency sounds
- The human nose can detect many scents
- Marsupials have short pregnancies
- Hurricanes are powerful, whirling tropical storms
- Most electricity is generated in power stations
- The Greenhouse Effect keep the Earth warm
- A toucan's beak is much longer than its body
- Constellations are patterns of stars in the sky
- The Vernal Equinox marks the first day of spring
- Fluorides are added to water
- The Achilles tendon is named after a greek hero
- The deepest drill into the earth is in the Arctic
- Triton is the coldest place in the Solar System
- Howler monkeys can be heard from miles away
- The Nazca Lines can only be clearly seen from air
- Leonardo da Vinci drew a design for a parachute around 1500
- Great white sharks are the biggest meat-eating sharks
- The Incas built stoned paved roads
- Hummingbirds beat their wings 90 times per second
- The world's smallest mammal is the bumblebee bat
- The Blue Whale is the world's largest mammal
- Astronauts sleep floating in the air
- Babies have a strong sense of smell
- Petroleum is used to make many products
- There are 91 known moons in the Solar System
- The tiniest bone in your body is the stirrup bone
- The Pacific is the world's largest ocean
- Hibernating mammals wake up by shivering violently
- Blood circulates at different speeds
- Many dinosaurs hunted in packs
- Solar flares have the energy of a million atom bombs
- "Arctic" comes from "Bear"
- Call across the ocean use satellites and cables.
- Clouds are made out of water
- A pulsar is a neutron star
- The worlds highest falls are in Venezuela
- Diamonds are over 3,000 million years old
- Beluga whales were called "sea canaries"
- The Milky Way belongs to the Local Group
- Copper was used over 10,000 years ago
- The Eiffel Tower was built in 1889
- Butterflies can only fly when warm
- Magnetism is an invisible force
- Tarantulas are not dangerous to humans
- Mercury is the planet with the shortest year
- The earliest known bird is the Archaeopteryx
- Water can be a solid, a liquid, and a gas
- Jupiter is the biggest planet in the Solar System
- Antarctica is the coldest place on Earth
- Atoms are the building blocks of the Universe
- The Tyrannosaurus weighted 7 tons
- Light is the fastest thing in the Universe
- There are more than 200 types of cell in your body
- Snow is crystals of ice
- Horses were domesticated 6,000 years ago
- The first skyscrapers were built in the 1880s
- There are more than 500 breeds of domestic dog
- Triceratops is the best known dinosaur
- Plastic are synthetic materials
- The Earth formed about 4,750 million years ago
- Your body needs water to function
- The first gasoline-powered car was created in 1885
- Australia is a country and a continent
- Llamas spit to show anger
- Dinosaurs could walk on two feet
- Holograms are made with laser lights
- The color of a star depends on its temperature
- All chickens came from India
- Quasars are as bright as 100 galaxies
- Oxygen turns blood red
- Antarctica was joined to Australia
- The first dinosaur fossils were found in England
- The first passenger monorail was built in 1825
- There are three states of matter
- No one knows what colors dinosaurs were
- A squirrel's bite won't give you rabies
- Antibodies protect your body
- There used to be only one continent on Earth
- Sounds travel faster through water than through air
- Mice don't really like cheese
- The sun is about 5 billion years old
- Elephants are good swimmers
- Antarctica is the largest desert on Earth
- Heat is the energy of moving molecules
- The Universe began about 15 billion years ago
- The Ornithomimus was the fastest dinosaur of all
- Bats are the only true flying mammals
- Monarch butterflies can fly across the ocean
- Your body gets warmer when you get sick
- Aluminum is the most common metal
- The Andean Condor is the world's biggest flying bird
- The body is mainly made of water
- The first dinosaurs are 230 million years old
- One side of the Moon can't be seen from Earth
- Smells are molecules
- The potato was born in Perú
- Tushka's Cool Jokes
- Why don´t grasshoppers go to lacrosse games?
- What position do camels play on baseball teams?
- How do surfers greet each other?
- What do yo call wood that has nothing to play with?
- If Michael Jordan gets athlete´s foot, what does Santa get?
- What´s baby sparrow´s favorite game?
- why did the pecan work out?
- How do bees star their exercises?
- How do witches work out?
- Where do trains work out?
- How do locomotives work out?
- What happens to vacuum cleaners at a busy mall?
- Why aren´t gorillas allowed in furniture stores?
- What´s the best time to shop for sporting goods?
- Which customers avoid early-bird sales?
- Did you hear about the two racing silkworms?
- Why do department stores like cats?
- What did the duck say when she bought lipstick?
- Where do animals go when they lose their tails?
- How does Dracula tell time?
- How do little vampires get to sleep?
- Why did the werewolf read The Lord of the Rings 50 tines?
- What do baby ghost get when they fall down?
- How do ghost avoid computer eyestrain?
- What kind of construction vehicle does a ghost drive?
- What do ghosts, wash their hair with?
- Do mummies like being mummies?
- Where do skeleton live?
- What did the lamp say when the owner turned it off?
- How do you welcome an angel?
- How do you welcome a sailor?
- How do you welcome a skydiver?
- what´s giraffe´s favorite fruit?
- What do you call a tiger in the snow?
- What animal is smarter than a talking parrot?
- What kind of cars do hummingbirds drive?
- What do you call sheep that join law enforcement.
- How do reindeer kill insects?
- why do grizzly bears live in caves?
- What kind of plane does an elephant fly?
- What do roses call each other?
- What happens when you slip on thin ice?
- What were Tarzan´s last words?
- Why is the letter D so aggravating?
- What is purple and member of your family?
- Which is the smartest pickle?
- When is a person not a person?
- What did the chocolate bar say to the lollipop?
- What is a pickle´s all time favorite musical.
- How does the earth fish?
- What time do ducks is a sharpshooter?
- Why do ducks have webbed feet?
- What kind of soda can´t you drink?
- What kind of illumination did Noah use on the ark?
- When do comedians take milk and sugar?
- What is a comedian´s favorite breakfast cereal?
- What game do baby chckens play?
- What was Dr. Jekyll´s favorite game?
- What musical instrument do bank robbers like best?
- Do choirs like to sing?
- What goes from city to city but never moves?
- What city never stays in the same place?
- What animal has big ears and eats carrots?
- What is the fastest land animal?
- What dog whines the most?
- Where do horses live?
- Do you think the gingerbread man is weird?
- Why did the two-headed monster win every race?
- Why did one Cyclops get along so we with the other?
- What´s monster´s favorite cheese?
- Doctor Doctor, nobody understands me.
- What is ¨out of bound¨?
- What is hail?
- What is a muth?
- What is a polygon?
- What is ice?
- What is carafe?
- Why are cooks cruel?
- What did the pilot say as he left the bar?
- What nut sounds like a sneeze?
- Why did Kojak throw away the Keys?
- When is a black dog not a black dog?
- What gets wetter as it dries?
- Why does a horse have six legs?
- When does a horse have six legs?
- What does a deaf fisherman need?
- What is the definition of a harp?
- Why did the man comb his hair with his toes?
- If a buttercup is yellow, what color is a hiccup?
- What did the policeman say to the three-headed man?
- What is the largest mouse in the world?
- ¨Doctor, doctor! I fell like a parrot.¨
- What´s brown and white, and runs around the forest crying ¨Mommy, Mommy¨?
- What´s the shortest bridge in the world?
- What´s tall, dark, and hamsome?
- What´s brown and squeaks when covered with milk?
- What is long, has a red hat and lies in a box?
- Where do gnomes live?
- What's round and bad tempered?
- What do lady sheep wear?
- What goes tick-tick woof-woof?
- Where will you always find diamonds?
- What was Noah's profession?
- Do you know what happens when you don't dust your mirror?
- How do you see King Arthur after it gets dark?
- What dogs are the best at telling time?
- When is the best time of year to find frogs?
- What did the hip-hop singer want for his birthday?
- When is the best time of year to find frogs?
- Do vampires make mistakes?
- What insect is the best musician?
- Where do insects shop?
- What dogs are the best at telling time?
- What is bunny fur?
- What happend when the cowboy called the cows?
- What do you get if you cross a pecan and a lobster?
- What do you get if you cross a dollar bill with a kangaroo?
- What do you get if you cross a platypus with a beaver?
- What do you get if you cross a hummingbird with a fly?
- What size soap do judges use?
- What's worse than being a two-ton witch?
- What do little ghosts prefer to frisbees?
- How do dentists fiz a dragon teeth?
- Why did the clock get kicked out of school?
- What's black and white and pink all over?
- What do tightrope walkers eat?
- What do you call a mistake you keep making and that you know you've made before?
- What did they called Old Macdonald when he joined the Army?
- What kind of dog washes clothes?
- Why don't elephants play basketball?
- What's a mouse's favorite television show?
- What's the quickest way for an ant to get to the top of a tree?
- Where does a lion go to exercise?
- What did the girl centipede say to the boy centipede at the dance?
- What do you call a rolled-up rabbit?
- What do planets like to read?
- What do mangos like to read?
- What do you call a pig that takes acting lessons?
- What happened to the guy who got his head stuck in the washing machine?
- What happened when they crosseda pit bull with a computer?
- How do you praise a computer?
- What do you call a rolled-up rabbit?
- Do you mind my smoking these cigars?
- What´s your new dog´s name?
- Do you sell cat´s meat?
- Why does an ostrich have such a long neck?
- What's yellow and goes "tick tock, tick tock"?
- What do you get if you cross a cow with a camel?
- What's a cat's favorite newspaper?
- What's smaller than a mite's mouth?
- What do you get if you cross an insect and a rabbit?
- What's a snowflake's dance called?
- What's green and jumps up and down?
- What's blue and chewed by whales?
- What's brown and yellow and flies along the bottom of the sea?
- What's furry, stings, collects nectar, and is difficult to hear?
- What's covered in feathers and cracks jokes?
- What's a mouse's favorite game?
- What's best for a sick horse?
- What would you call a bad-tempered gorilla with cotton wool in its ears?
- What's a caveman's favorite place to shop?
- Why did the cranberry turn red?
- What did the cloud say to the banker?
- What do you call an insect that wears a tuxedo?
- What tools do you need in math?
- How is food served to the man in the moon?
- What's white with black and red spots?
- What's creamy and good for sick pigs?
- What's gray, squeaks, and ruled Rome?
- What's brightly colored and goes "Hmmmm-choo", "hmmmm-choo"?
- What does a skunk do when it's angry?
- What's green and stands in the corner?
- What's a horse's favorite game?
- What's good for measuring dogs?
- What's a goose's favorite fruit?
- What's green on the outside and yellow inside?
- How do you catch a school of fish?
- How do bunnies stay cool in the summertime?
- How did the gorilla break out its cage?
- What does a hungry mathematician likes to eat?
- Why did the silly dentist throw out his electric toothbrush?
- Why didn't the kid want to use toothpaste?
- Why was the farmer angry?
- Why is the letter K like a pig´s tail?
- What do you call a cow that can´t give milk?
- What´s pink and grows under your nose?
- What makes a Maltese Cross?
- What´s mad and travels to the moon?
- What´s a ghost´s favorite dinner?
- What´s green, noisy and dangerous?
- When is a windows like a star?
- What is the equator?
- What is the Cheddar Gorge?
- What is hypnotism?
- What is a water otter?
- Have you heard the story about the slippery eel?
- What would happen if pigs could fly?
- Who is always being let down by his mates?
- What does the Indian ghost live in?
- What are a ghoul´s best friend?
- What does a ghost take for a bad cold?
- What do you think of Dracula films?
- Where does Dracula always stay when he´s in New York?
- What show do ghost like to go to?
- How do ghost get through locked doors?
- What's gray and wears a crown?
- What's the most famous fish?
- What do you get if you cross a sardina with a saber?
- What's 10 yards long, lives in Scotland, and never wins anything?
- What's yellow and never talks to anyone?
- What fish do shoemakers use every day?
- What do horseflies do when you invite them to dinner?
- What kind of crackers are bad for parrots?
- What kind of plant hates to hate company?
- What bread has the worst attitude?
- What fairy tale monsters lost her sheep?
- What do you call an ordinary aircraft?
- what do you do when you hit a seashell with a stick?
- How do we know that spiders own computers?
- What did Captain Hook do when he lost his hand?
- How do rubber bands warm up?
- Why did the police go to the baseball stadium?
- What do petunias wear when they exercise?
- How does Mother Earth fish?
- Why was Cinderella so bad at basketball?
- How did the clock feel when no one wound it up?
- How did the dentist fix the dragon´s teeth?
- Where should you pay your car repair bill?
- What´s a spider´s favorite picnic food?
- What did the conductor say to the drummer?
- What do whales use to hold their tails up?
- What would you get worms ruled the earth?
- Why don´t bumblebees go shopping?
- What happened to the origami shop thta used to be on this block?
- Why don´t ants smell?
- What kind of cars do ponies drive?
- What happebed when the pelican flew over the whale?
- How did the farmer mend his jeans?
- What do you say to a slow walnut?
- What would you call a small wound?
- How is a movie like a broken leg?
- What do you call a dad who sings and dances?
- What do waiters ask when playing tennis?
- Why did the cookie go to the doctor?
- What is a drill sergeant?
- What is a tree´s favorite drink?
- What do you call an underground home for a donkey?
- How so you transform what you put food on into tardinnes?
- What is a second scoop of ice cream called?
- What do you call flowers that use the Internet?
- How do kangaroos add up their purchases?
- Why can´t Dracula play baseball?
- why do skeletons play piano?
- What´s gray, weighs 4 tons, and flies?
- What´s short, scared of wolves, and swears a iot?
- What has tentacles and dances on television?
- What do you get if you cross a river with a boat?
- What´s black and white, black and white, black and white?
- Did they catch the burglar who stole the piano?
- What do you do when you hit a seashell with a stick?
- Why didn´t the horse draw the cart?
- What do planets like to read?
- Why did the long distance runner go to the veterinarian?
- Why did the cranberry turn red?
- What do baseball players on third base like to sing?
- What is a tree´s favorite drink?
- What does an octoopus wear?
- Which army officer is a pest?
- What big cat lives in the backyard?
- What peels and hips but doesn´t crack?
- What did Adam never see or possess, yet left two ffor each of his childrem?
- Why did the elephant wear green sneakers?
- Why did the lobster blush?
- What did the carpet say to the floor?
- Doctor, doctor! I feel like car!
- Why are pizza makers so wealthy?
- Why was the pajama store closed?
- what do you get if you cross a telephone and a shirt?
- What is fat. green goes ¨Oink, oink¨?
- What´s an elephant in a fridge called?
- What´s the best way to make trouser last?
- What do pianists use to eat their steak?
- What does an astronaut eat her spaghetti from?
- Where do worms get their mail?
- What should you do for a starving cannibal?
- What is always behind time?
- What is hypnotism?
- Where do pigs like to sit?
- What do you call two recently married dandelions?
- What do you call a window in a palace?
- Where do horses stay in a hotel?
- What did the cow girl say to the boy cow?
- Where does smart butter go?
- How are the dogcatchers paid?
- What would you get if you crossed a white bear with a rabbit?
- What did you call a cranberry that eats another cranberry?
- What game do horses play?
- What do you call a broken phonograph record?
- What gives milk and has to wheels?
- What do you call a dumb ape?
- What do they put on a criminal pig?
- If a athlete gets athlete's foot, what does a scuba diver get?
- What do mangos like to read?
- Why aren't robots ever afraid?
- How do dentists fix dragon teeth?
- What is the most famous skunk statue in Egypt?
- What do skeletons say before eating?
- What would you get if you crossed a termite with a praying mantis?
- What do you call a banana that's been stepped on?
- What's a centipede?
- What's a chimp's favorite ice cream?
- What happens when a witch breaks the sound barrier?
- What do canaries say on Halloween?
- What does a troll call his apartment?
- What do you get if you cross a laptop with a skunk?
- What do you get if you cross a swordfish with a bumblebee?
- What's the difference between a small, nectar-eating bird and a bunch of cows standing around doing nothing?
- What did the teddy bear say when offered dessert?
- Why don't bumblebees go shopping?
- Why couldn't the piano go home after the concert?
- What did the mother piano say to the baby grand?
- What do you get when you cross a BMW with a piano?
- Why was the pianist smacking her head on the keys?
- Why do baseball players make good pianists?
- What insect is musical?
- How do frogs and rabbits make beer?
- What is long, has a red hat and lies in a box?
- Where do they go dancing in California?
- What did the invisible man says to his girlfriend?
- What did the picture say to the wall?
- Who was the first underwater spy?
- What wobbles when it flies?
- What is gray and has four legs and a trunk?
- Why are ghost cowards?
- Why do lightning bugs get A's in school?
- What do skeletons play in a band?
- How do you catch a fairy?
- What do baby ghosts turn on before they go to bed?
- Why does Batman search for worms?
- Why did tiny Tim throw the butter out of the window?
- What is striped and goes 'round and 'round?
- How big are centipedes?
- Where do strawberries play their saxophones?
- What famous detective liked to take bubble baths?
- What do ducks like on television?
- Do you know the joke about the bed?
- What goes in pink and comes out blue?
- If cakes are 66 cents each, how much are upside-down cakes?
- What did the beach say when the tide came in?
- Why did the whale cross the ocean?
- Why is the letter D like a sailor?
- When does a farm go round and round?
- What did the digital watch say to its mother?
- What did the frog say to the tailor who couldn't find the scissors?
- What's the worm army called?
- What's red, squishy, and says "excuse me"?
- What ha feathers and carries water?
- What's cowardly, thin, and full of noodles?
- What's plastic, runs on batteries, and counts cattle?
- What's an Eskismo cow called?
- What's brown, crazy and lives in South America?
- What sits in a stroller and wobbles?
- What's the most famous fish?
- What's a spider thathas just got married?
- What do mice do all day?
- What's a frog's favorite drink?
- What's a sleeping prehistoric mosnter called?
- What's yellow, has twenty-four legs, and sings?
- What color is a shout?
- What's the easiest way to make a bandstand?
- What's the punishment for bigamy?
- What do you get if you cross a cat with a canary?
- What's green and jumps up and down?
- What's the most popular gardening magazine in the world?
- What's a computer's favorite food?
- What's Count Dracula's New York house called?
- What do you get if you cross a cow with an octopus?
- What do you get if you cross a cat with an ambulance man?
- What do you get if you cross a chicken with gunpowder?
- What do you get if you cross a chicken with a kangaroo?
- What's the best day to cook bacon and eggs?
- What goes "ABC... slurp... DFE... slurp"?
- What's an English wasp's favorite TV station?
- What did the bees go on strike for?
- What's a cat's favorite newspaper?
- What do you get if you cross a cw with a camel?
- What's yellow and goes "kcauq, kcauq"?
- How do you get rid of a boomerang?
- How do you get six elephants in a matchbox?
- How does an angel greet another?
- How do you make an elephant stew?
- Why does a man permit himself to be hen-pecked?
- What's best for a kangaroo with appendicitis?
- What makes a giraffe so arrogant?
- What's the best for a sick horse?
- What do frogs wear in summer?
- What's a cat that has just swallowed a duck?
- How do pigs say goodbye?
- How do you make a car smile?
- What's spotted and untrustworthy?
- What do you get if you cross an elephant with a mouse?
- Why did the silly kid put an alarm clock in his shoe?
- Why was the Easter Bunny so upset?
- Why was he robin first in line at the beauty parlor?
- How do you keep a monkey in suspense?
- How do you fix a tomato?
- What's an vampire's favorite animal?
- What's a vampire bath?
- What's a vampire's favorite fruit?
- What's Dracula's car called?
- What's got feathers, wings and fangs?
- What do you get if you cross Dracula with snow?
- What's Count Dracula's favorite coffee?
- What's small, brown, and carries a suitcase?
- What's a fisherman paid?
- What has six legs, four eyes, and a tail?
- What's the hottest show on television?
- How do you stop an elephant from chasing you?
- How do you find your dog if he's lost in the woods?
- How does an angel greet another?
- How do you prevent water from getting into your house?
- What's Batman doing in the tree?
- What's a snowflakes' dance called?
- What's smaall, blue, and eat cakes?
- What was Noah's profession?
- What's an army?
- What did Adam first plant in the Garden of Eden?
- What is the strongest day in the week?
- Why did the banana go out with the prune?
- Why did Ken keep his trumpet in the fridge?
- What do porcupines say when they're kissing?
- What's a two-week-old, black and white Russian dog called?
- What did one wall say to the other wall?
- What is long, has a red hat and lies in a box?
- What is the most common illness in birds?
- Who was the first underwater spy?
- What wobbles when it flies?
- What would happen if pigs could fly?
- Have you heard the story about the skyscraper?
- Who is always being let down by his mates?
- What has six legs, four ears, and a tail?
- What can you touch, see, and make but can't hold?
- Why is the letter D like a sailor?
- How does a quiet Hawaiian laugh?
- What is a big frog's favorite game?
- What kind of eyeglasses so spies wear?
- What do you getwhen you tear a scarf in two?
- What did the mirror say to the dresser?
- Why did the turtle cross the road?
- What caused to riot in the post office?
- What would you get if you crossed an octopus and a mink?
- What happens when you ask an oyster a personal question?
- What kind of oven does the ocean use to cook its food?
- Why don't cows ever have any money?
- What did the tree say to the woodchopper?
- How do you begin a book about ducks?
- What do you call a grandmother who designs programs?
- Why did the computer sneeze?
- Where do snowmen put their websites?
- Why do beavers spend sso much time on the internet?
- Where do strawberries play their saxophones?
- What do you get when a waiter trips?
- Why do lightning bugs get A's in school?
- Who did Frankestein take to the prom?
- Why doesn't Dracula like garlic?
- How do you transform extreme fear into a mistake?
- What do you call a banana split that falls to the ground?
- What kind of toes do you find underground?
- How do you transform extreme fear into a mistake?
- What do you get if you cross a boulder and a biscuit?
- What do you call a banana split that falls to the ground?
- What kind of toes do you find underground?
- What games do baby cows lilke best?
- What dogs are the best at telling time?
- Do vampires make mistakes?
- What do you call pigs that want everything?
- What kind of coffe does a vampire drink?
- Where do mummies go for pizza?
- Where do cats go to dance?
- What metal can't feel anything?
- What kind of jokes do vegetable like?
- What do you call a rotten essay?
- How do pandas ride bikes safely?
- What do kangaroos ask for at motels?
- Where the spiders get their music?
- Why did the farmer plow his field with a steam-roller?
- What do you get when you spill soda in a cornfield?
- What should ypu do with rude pepperoni?
- Where do bad vegetables go?
- What dressing does Popeye put on his salad?
- What card game do construction workers play?
- What game do mice like to play?
- What's a tornado's favorite game?
- Where do strawberries play their saxophones?
- Why do lightning bugs get A's in school?
- What does a frog say when it sees something terrific?
- What is a sleppy king's favorite Christmas carol?
- What is the reasonable amount of money to pay for an airplane ticket?
- What happens when you surf the Internet?
- What do you call the location of your eye?
- What did the hip-hop singer want for his birthday?
- When is the best time fo year to find frogs?
- Do vampires make mistakes?
- What happened when the bear scratchedits back on the tree?
- What probably happend if your car wont' stop?
- What do you call a funeral for a small fruit?
- What do you get if you cross a bear with a rooster?
- What do you get if you cross a shark and a hyena?
- What do you get if you crossa hummingbird and a turkey?
- What kind of 8 teaches school?
- Why did everyone go hear the little hen sing?
- What would you get if you crossed a cactus with a porcupine?
- What do you call sea gulls that live by the bay?
- How can you tell if an elephant is in your cereal box?
- What can of killer uses a spoon?
- Why can't bicycles go as fast as cars?
- What do you call a ghost and a zombie that go out on a date?
- What dogs are the best at telling time?
- What's the opposite of a cool cat?
- Why did the poodle go to bed early?
- When is the best time to find frogs?
- What kind of bull can you always trust?
- What kind of bull is the cutest?
- Why did the teacher give the little hen a bad grade?
- What is a walkway on an island?
- What is a walkway on an island?
- In what months is it okay to tell a lie?
- What's the coldest tropical island?
- Wher does a hen keep her wallet?
- What does a hen wear in prison?
- How do you transform an aircraft into a strategy?
- What do you get when you tighten the ropes on tents too much?
- What's the opposite of a cool cat?
- Why do bears get so many splinters?
- How do cows communicate?
- Which state is like a horse's hair?
- What did the old monster say to the young monster?
- What month do Brazilian dancers like best?
- What month always asks permission?
- What are unhappy cranberries called?
- What do you call a croissant on roller skates?
- What do you call a bird in winter?
- What two letters describe the winter?
- Why do bears have fur?
- Where do Easter bunnies dance?
- What's the best way to paint the ocean?
- Why did the angry sailor walk strangely?
- What kind of bull is hard to see?
- What's purple and white, lives in the sea, and has big teeth?
- Which zombie won the weird zombie race?
- What animal is big, grey, and wears glass slippers?
- What do teenage monsters say when they like something?
- What do you call a smashed purple vegetable?
- What kind of deer is the scariest?
- What kind of music do rabbits like best?
- Where do pigs park their cars?
- What did the mother bee say to the bad baby bee?
- What kind of monster keeps getting lost?
- What's the difference between a rude person and an angry flags?
- What airplane flies backwards?
- Why did the lady mouse want to move?
- What do rodents drink in the summer?
- What do whales chew?
- How can you tell when a vegetable is angry?
- Why do gorillas have big nostrils?
- What kind of lions are the best swimmers?
- Who do fish see when they don't feel well?
- What kind of birds do knights like best?
- What do knights do when they get scared?
- What does a button do?
- What fish smells the worst?
- What monsters are afraid of small places?
- What do little boy monsters become when they grow up?
- What is an electric bulb that doesn't weigh very much?
- What do you call a nice woodland animals?
- What happens to shellfish that work out in a gym for long periods of time?
- What's the difference between a clown and someone who loves dollar bills?
- What do you get if you cross a cow with a duck?
- What's the worst thing about being an octopus?
- How do snakes sign their letters?
- What animal lives in a gym?
- What do spiders eat with their hamburgers?
- Where do owls stay when they take a trip?
- What did the mother rope say to the baby rope?
- What did the cloud have under its raincoat?
- What did they call Old Macdonald when he joined the army?
- What dog bakes cake?
- Why do golfers like Fruit Loops?
- Why do hockey players skate on ice?
- On what day do spiders have a good meal?
- Did you hear about the tire that had a nervous breakdown?
- How do robins stay in shape?
- What gives milk and has to wheels?
- Why was Snow White a good judge?
- What kind of parties do prisioners like?
- What streches and steals things?
- Why don't fish watch TV?
- What jewerly do vegetables wear?
- How did the peach feel after it was eaten?
- What do planets like to read?
- What's a caterpillar worst enemy?
- What did one cow say to the other cow who was in her way?
- Why was the invisible man depressed?
- What letters do ghost like to send?
- What should you do if you're stuck on the Web?
- What should you do if you're stuck on the Web?
- What do birds need when they're sick?
- Where do dirty socks go when they get sick?
- Where do angels swing and slide?
- What game do falcons play on ice?
- What's a baby's favorite ride?
- Why did the rabbit buy a house?
- How do you welcome a ghost into your house?
- Why do frogs have such an easy life?
- Why are potatoes good detectives?
- Where do bad vegetables volunteer?
- What do you get when a police officer suprises a skunk?
- What do mice use for bad breath?
- Why did the silly student eat his homework?
- What's the best thing to take to the desert?
- How do carpenters greet each other?
- What did the motorcyclists ask for at the motel?
- What does Farmer Darth Vader cultivate?
- When is it bad luck to have a black cat following you?
- What do cats say when they want to go out-doors?
- Where do dogs and cats buy their furniture?
- What kind of dogs do vampires own?
- What happend when the cat ate a ball of yarn?
- What kind of car does Mickey Mouse drive?
- What's a ladybug's favorite singing group?
- What do scientists do after they discover a new gene?
- What do you call a chicken farmer?
- What do you call a princess with a tidy house?
- Where do ghost mail their letter?
- What did the hip-hop singer want for his birthday?
- What does an egg do when another egg bothers it?
- What kind of market does a dog hate?
- Who brings dogs their presents at Christmas?
- Why did the cookie go to the doctor?
- What does a rabbit have when it ges a good job offer?
- What illnes can you catch from a martial arts expert?
- What do you call cars in the fall?
- Why did King Kong cross the road?
- What happened when the silkworms had a race?
- How do bees get to school?
- What's a caterpillar?
- What's the difference between Asian eating utensils and a fence around a chicken coop?
- What do you get if you cross a lion and a drummer?
- Why don't oysters share their toys?
- What do you get if you cross an electric eel and a light bulb?
- What do you get if you cross an owl with a fish?
- What kind of Mexican food do hens like?
- Why didn't the little skeleton do his homework?
- What do you do when you listen at this place?
- How do oysters communicate?
- What is a fish's favorite country?
- Where do knights go to dance?
- What holidays do monsters like best?
- What do you call a very strange marketplace?
- What do you get if you cross a python and an orange?
- How do you say goodbye to your spaghetti?
- What has two arms, two legs, and a horn?
- What kind of game can you play with nine clocks and your feet?
- What smells but has no smell?
- Why did the little gnome hate school?
- How do you transform an aircraft into a strategy?
- Who is the worst entertainer in the Himalayan mountains?
- What is the weirdest vegetable?
- What's a monster's favorite month?
- What does a person from Thailand wear around his neck?
- What do you get if you cross a hummingbird with a T-Rex?
- What do you get if you cross a squirrel with a monkey?
- What do you get if you cross a chameleon and a camel?
- What's the speed limit in Egypt?
- What's the speed limit in Egypt?
- What's a cannibal's favorite game?
- What do you get if you cross a giraffe with a dog?
- What's green and for hire?
- What's white, runs, and lies under the bed with its tongue hanging out?
- What's smashing and comes between morning and afternoon?
- What game do horses like?
- What do you do with a sick parakeet?
- What's round and bad-tempered?
- Why did the farmer drive over his potatoe field with a steam-roller?
- What is red, has bumps and a horse, and lives on the prairie?
- What do mermaids eat for breakfast?
- Why would a compliment from a chicken be an insult?
- Why do people laugh up their sleeves?
- How do you prevent water from getting into your house?
- How did the computer criminal get out of jail?
- How do vegetables trace their ancestry?
- Why is a horse like a lollipop?
- Why is the letter K like a pig's tail?
- Why did the robber take a shower before holding up the bank?
- What wobbles when it flies?
- What do you get if you cross a mink and a kangaroo?
- What would you do with a sick wasp?
- What orders does everybody like to receive?
- What is always behind time?
- When is a windows like a star?
- Why do birds in a nest always agree?
- What do you call a baby whale?
- What did the strawberry say to the second strawberry?
- Why is the sand wet?
- Do you know the joke about the dirty window?
- Why did the owl make everyone laugh?
- Why did the Red Indian put a bucket over his head?
- What goes in black and comes out white?
- What can't you do if you put 250 melons in the fridge?
- What did the big candle say to the little candle?
- What did the tie say to the hat?
- What did the spider say to the beetle?
- What is the best thing to take into the desert?
- Do you know how to make a bandstand?
- How do you make a cigarrette lighter?
- What's mad and goes to the moon?
- Why does a cow go over a hill?
- Why did the worm oversleep?
- Why are football players cool?
- Why did the ram fall over the cliff?
- Why did the dog go to court?
- Why did the antelope run?
- Did you hear about the skunk who had no nose?
- Did you ever hear the story of the new roof?
- Why is a cat like a transcontinental highway?
- Why did the biscuit cry?
- What do you call a cat who swallowed a duck?
- How do you keep a monkey in suspense?
- What did the rock pool say to another rock pool?
- Why did the dieter bring scissors to the dinner table?
- Why are cards like wolves?
- Why did the crow sit on the telephone line?
- Why is a tent like a baseball?
- What is the best way to communicate with a fish?
- Why do lions eat raw meat?
- What has four legs and one foot?
- What was Noah's profession?
- What do you get when you eat foam?
- Who invented gunpowder?
- When does an astronaut have his midday meal?
- How did the exhausted sparrow land safely?
- Why did the judge sentence the comedian to five years in jail?
- Why did the boy hold his report card over his head?
- Why are tomatoes the slowest fruit?
- Why would men avoid the letter A?
- Why did the woman spray insect repellent on her computer?
- Why did the crazy man eat a light bulb?
- Why was the silly person able to buy ice at half price?
- Why do women not become bald as soon as men?
- Why shouldn't you tell jokes when you're ice-skating?
- Why is the sea measured in knots?
- Why did the orange stop in the middle of the road?
- Why is it so hard to make frogs cry?
- Why does your sense of touch suffer when you are ill?
- Why don't silly people call 911 in an emergency?
- Why was the baseball player arrested in the middle of the game?
- Why do Irish peasants wear capes?
- Why did the golfer wear an extra pair of trousers?
- Why did the sea bird rob the jewerly store?
- Why are dolphins cleverer than humans?
- Is it dangerous to swim on a full stomach?
- Why does Santa always climb down chimneys?
- Why is twice ten the same as twice eleven?
- Why did the cracker cry?
- Why do we go to bed?
- Wo drives all his costumers away?
- Have you heard the story of the church bell?
- What can you give someone and still keep?
- When is a door not a door?
- What is the longest night of the year?
- Why should dieters avoid the letter C?
- What did one hair say to the other hair?
- When is it good manners to spit in a man's face?
- Why did the silly kid put his watch on the scale?
- What's the most popular gardening magazine?
- How can you touch the floor without standing on your feet or hands?
- What were Alexander Graham Bell's first words?
- What could cause a lot of trouble if it stopped smoking?
- What size are very large eggs?
- What do you get if a cat swallows a ball of wool?
- What did the german policeman say to his chest?
- Why did the burglar take a shower?
- Who is the smallest sailor in the world?
- What is it you can put in your right hand but not in your left?
- What's the noisiest of all games?
- What does a match do when it loses its temper?
- What does a ball do when it stops rolling?
- What happened to the plastic surgeon when he stood by the fire?
- Where does satifaction come from?
- What goes in pink and comes out blue?
- When is the best time to go to bed?
- Where will you always finds diamonds?
- What's the difference between maximum and minimum?
- What do you get if you cross a bear and a skunk?
- Why doesn't a frog jump when it's sad?
- Where do geologists go for entertainment?
- What did the boy snake say to the girl snake?
- What did Adam say on the day before Christmas?
- When is a house not on land nor on water?
- When is a Chinese restaurant successful?
- What do jelly babies wear on their feet?
- Where do they go dancing in California?
- What did the invisible man say to his girlfriend?
- What did the magnet say to the second magnet?
- How would you avoid starvation on a desert island?
- What´s seven feet high, green and sits in the corner?
- What room has no walls, floor, ceiling, or windows?
- Why the schoolboy throw a clock out of the window?
- What did the ceiling say to the four walls?
- What shampoo do mountains use?
- What kind of ball is fun to play with but doesn't bounce?
- Why was the belt arrested?
- What is black and white and hides in caves?
- What two garden vegetables fight crime?
- What kind of television program do you see in the morning?
- What's the difference between the law and an ice cube?
- What's the most noble creature of the sea?
- What mouse was ruler of the Romans?
- Why did the lobster blush?
- What do you call a foreign body on a griddle?
- What is gray and blue and very big?
- What did one raindrop say to the other?
- How do elephants speak to each other?
- Is it hard to spot a leopard?
- What kind of suit does a duck wear?
- Did you hear the joke about the express train?
- How do retired sailors greet each other?
- Why did the surgeon wear a tuxedo in the operation room?
- What is NBC?
- What word has three double letters in a row?
- What is a mouse's favorite game?
- Why did Snoopy quit the comic strip?
- What can you swallow that can also swallow you?
- What geometric figure do sailors fear?
- Who was the first underwater spy?
- What was the police dog's telephone number?
- What do ghosts like to ride on at the fair?
- What do you get if you cross a kangaroo and a elephant?
- What's the best cure for sleepwalking?"
- What did the big chimney say to the little chimney?
- What did the carpet say to the floor?
- What is the most common illnes in birds?
- Where do gnomes live?
- What dog has no tail?
- Where do cows go on vacations?
- What would happen if pigs could fly?
- What's the difference between an Indian elephant and an African elephant?
- What's the difference between a jeweler and a jailer?
- What do you get if you cross a cat and a lemon?
- Why will the world never end?
- What job did the lady ghost have on an airplane?
- What does a doctor tell you if you've swallowed a spoon?
- What did one germ say to the other germ?
- What's the difference between an Indian elephant and an African elephant?
- What has 22 legs and goes crunch, crunch, crunch?
- What does a banana do when it sees a gorilla?
- What is green and goes slam, slam, slam, slam?
- What do you get if you cross a rhinoceros and a goose?
- What is the cheapest way to buy holes?
- Where can you buy a ruler that is 3 feet long?
- What do you say to King Kong when he gets married?
- What's the best way to get rid of a demon?
- What does an up-to-date witch fly?
- What is the first thing little vampires learn in school?
- What is green, small, and in the corner of a room?
- Who gets congratulated when they are down and out?
- Why did the match box?
- When do boxers start wearing gloves?
- What's faster than a speed bullet, more powerful than locomotive, and green?
- What kind of teeth can you buy for a dollar?
- What is the best thing for nail biting?
- What is raised during the rainy season in Brazil?
- What are the odds of something happening at 12:50?
- Why is doing nothing so tiring?
- How many feet are in the world?
- If a box is filled with water, what can you add to make it weight less?
- What kind of match won't light fires?
- What do you call a six-foot-tall basketball player?
- What color is a happy cat?
- What kind of shoes do frogs like?
- What do you need to spot an iceberg 20 miles away?
- How does a king open a door?
- What month is worst for soldiers?
- What kind of chair does a geologist like to relax on?
- What does the Invisible Woman drink at snacktime?
- What do frogs drink at snacktime?
- What is the best-looking geometric figure?
- If George Washington were alive today, what would he be most famous for?
- Where is Timbuktu?
- Why were the sardines out of work?
- What do whales like to chew?
- How many relatives went to the picnic?
- Why do elephants have short tails?
- What do you get when you cross a penguin and an alligator?
- How does a penguin make pancakes?
- Who's the penguin's favorite aunt?
- Where do penguins go to dance?
- How do Penguins drink their cola?
- Where do penguins go swimming?
- Why do seals swim in salt water?
- What do you get if you cross a polar bear and a seal?
- What's the difference between an iceberg and a clothes brush?
- What do you call a big mean polar bear?
- Why did the otter cross the road?
- Which is lighter, the Sun or the Earth?
- What is quicker than a fish?
- When is it dangerous to play cards?
- What dog do you find in the U.N.?
- What invention allows people to walk through walls?
- What goes "Ho, ho, ho, swoosh, ho, ho, ho, swoosh"?
- Why was Adam's first day so long?
- What is an electrician's favorite ice cream?
- What punctuation mark is used in writing dance music?
- Who is is safe when a man-eating lion is loose?
- What do frogs drink at snack-time?
- When is it impossible to give someone the time of day?
- What do you get if you cross a skunk and a raccoon?
- How can you tell which end of a worm is its head?
- How do you avoid being driven crazy?
- What bird is useful in boxing matches?
- What do you give an elk with indigestion?
- What does an elf do when it gets home from school?
- What is big and yellow and comes in the morning to brighten Mother's day?
- What do you say to a hitch-hiking frog?
- What is green and thin and jumps every few seconds?
- What do you get if you crossed a noisy frog and a shaggy dog?
- What do you get if you cross a skunk and a gorilla?
- What language do chimpanzees speak?
- How mad can a kangaroo get?
- What do you get if you cross a hyena and a parrot?
- What has antlers and eats cheese?
- What does Tarzan sing at Christmas time?
- When the baby cries at night, who gets up?
- How do you send a message to a VIking?
- What is green and red all over?
- Where do nuts gather?
- How do you catch an electric eel?
- Where is the ocean deepest?
- What kind of person steals soap?
- Why did the burglar take a bath before breaking out of jail?
- What always speaks the truth but doesn't say a word?
- What pierces your ears without leaving a hole?
- What is the first safety rule for witches?
- What do you get when you cross a ghost and an elephant?
- What clothing does a house wear?
- What is the oldest fruit?
- What do rich turtles wear?
- What is beautiful, gray, and wears glass slippers?
- What is it like to have eight arms?
- What kind of bars can't keep prisoners in jail?
- Why are four-legged animals such poor dancers?
- Why shouldn't you cry over spilled milk?
- What do you get if you cross a germ and a comedian?
- What did the stamp say when it fell in love with the envelope?
- What do you get when you cross a wolf and a roster?
- Did you hear the joke about the sun?
- What is the correct way to file and axe?
- What snacks do robots serve at parties?
- What do termites eat for breakfast?
- What did Mary have for dinner?
- What do sweet potatoes do when they play together?
- Where do people in India go for sandwiches?
- What is good on a roll but bad on the road?
- What is black and white and blue all over?
- What do you get if you cross a cow and an octopus?
- What kind of geese are found in portugal?
- What kind of tea do a king and queen drink?
- Where do blue Easter eggs come from?
- What is green, long, and grouchy?
- Where do fortune tellers dance?
- What part of your body has the most rhythm?
- Where does a dog go when he loses his tail?
- What is an octopus?
- What has four legs and can't walk?
- What is a net?
- What is the biggest moth of all?
- Can February March?
- Why did the banana go out with the prune?
- Why do bananas have to use suntan lotion?
- How do you make a hot-dog stand?
- What is a hen's favorite vegetable?
- What do you get when you cross a stream and a brook?
- What goes zzub-zzub?
- Why did the lion spit out the clown?
- Why did the tomato turn red?
- What smells but doesn't have a nose?
- Who can jump higher than a mountain?
- Did the water laugh when the ice told the joke?
- What starts with E and ends with E and has only one letter in it?
- What animal can never open a door?
- What did the digital clock say to its mother?
- Which animal is always smiling?
- What do you get when you jump in the Red Sea?
- What do you say when you meet a two-headed dinosaur?
- Why do bees buzz?
- What do you get when an elephant skydives?
- How do you help a hungry tiger?
- What are the two things you can't have for breakfast?
- What room can't a skeleton go in?
- What is green, small, and goes up and down?
- Why do babies go to sleep when they hear a lullaby?
- What do you call it when an orange hits a banana?
- What did the bee say to the flower?
- What should you do to a blue elephant?
- How do you stop a charging elephant?
- What is black and white and pink all over?
- What makes more noise than a dinosaur?
- Why shouldn't you take a bear to the zoo?
- What do you call a cat that is frozen?
- What did the cat say to the elephant?
- What do moths study in school?
- What can make an octopus laugh?
- What is large and gray and goes around and around in circles?
- What do you get if you add 2357 and 5190 and then subtract 555 and divide the answer by 45?
- What is a volcano?
- What goes down but never goes up?
- Why did the elephant painted its toes green?
- Why was six afraid of seven?
- Where do fish come from?
- What did the traffic light say to the driver?
- Why is it hard for a ghost to tell a lie?
- What is the one word a dog can say?
- Which fish go to heaven when they die?
- What does a Triceratops sit on?
- Why didn't the banana snore?
- What is hairy and coughs?
- Why didn't the skeleton go to the party?
- What has antlers and sucks blood?
- Who is never hungry at Christmas?
- What do you get if you cross a parrot with a centipede?
- What do you call a very rude bird?
- Why does Dracula have no friends?
- What does a magician like to keep up his sleeve?
- When does a dog go "moo"?
- What do you get if you cross a dog and a cheetah?
- What do you call a homeless snail?
- How many books can you put in an empty backpack?
- What has four wheels and flies?
- Why do hummingbirds hum?
- What do you get when you cross a cheetah & a hamburger?
- What is red and goes up and down?
- What do you call a gigantic polar bear?
- What did the sea say to the iceberg?
- What do you give a pig with a rash?
- Why did the elephant stand on the marshmallow?
- Why do birds fly south?
- What do you call a snowman with a suntan?
- What's the difference between a TV and a newspaper?
- What do prisoners use to call each other?
- What do you get when you cross a snowman with a vampire?
- What do sea monsters eat?
- Why are goldfish red?
- What kind of hair do oceans have?
- What is the most slippery country in the world?
- Why does a flamingo lift up one leg?
- What has forty feet and sings?
- What's in the middle of a jellyfish?
- What subject is a witch good at in school?
- What's white on the outside, green on the inside and comes with relish and onions?
- What's green, has 4 legs, and is dangerous?
- What has two legs and flies?
- Why do fireman wear red suspendors?
- What do you call a fish with no eyes?
- What are the best things to put in a fruit pie?
- What lives under the sea and carries 64 people?
- Who earns a living by driving their customers away?
- What sound do porcupines make when they kiss?
- What word is always pronounced wrong?
- What has antlers and sucks blood?
- How do the fish get to school?
- What is the one word a dog can say?
- Why do you go to bed?
- What do bees chew?
- What's red, yellow and green and has a wing span of 15 yards?
- Why are tall people lazier than short people?
- Why don't elephants ride bicycles?
- Where would you find a prehistoric cow?
- What's yellow on the inside and green on the outside?
- What's black when clean and white when dirty?
- What do you call a sleeping bull?
- What is the biggest ant of all?
- Who wears the biggest hat in the world?
- What is the largest mouse in the world?
- What swings through trees and is very dangerous?
- What do you call a mad spaceman?
- What travels 100 miles per hour underground?
- How do you milk a mouse?
- Why do bees hum?
- What animals need oiling?
- How do you stop a dog from barking in the back seat of a car?
- What driver can never be arrested for speeding?
- When is it bad luck to cross the path black cat?
- What is hairy and coughs?
- Why do bears wear fur coats?
- What goes black and white and black and white and black and white?
- What do you get if you cross a cat and an octagon?
- How do you stop an elephant from passing through the eye of a needle?
- What dog has no tail?
- What's white and goes up?
- What is brown, has four feet, a hump, and is found in Antarctica?
- Why do bulls have horns?
- How do you stop a rooster crowing on Sunday?
- Why do birds fly south in the winter?
- What's black and white and red all over?
- Why did the orange stop?
- What is black and white and goes up and down?
- What has four legs, a tail, whiskers, and flies?
- Why do witches fly about on broomsticks?
- What has a horn and gives milk?
- What is a common illness in China?
- How does an octopus go into battle?
- What is black and white and has sixteen wheels?
- Pookie's Cool Facts
- Pitch Document
- Icestuff
- Songs
- Games
- Cool Facts
- Pookie's Cool Facts
- Yeoman Warders are the Tower´s special guards.
- Composite volcanoes are cone-shaped.
- There are two pairs floating ribs.
- Bee and wasp stings have barbed ends to keep the sting in long enough to inject the poison.
- The platypus´s burrow can extend 100ft from the water´s edge to the nest.
- The redder and coolers a star is, the dimmer it glows.
- A thecodont´s teeth grew from roots fixed into pitlike sockets in the jawbone, as in dinosaurs.
- The first public lottery was held in Old St. Paul´s in 1569 to raise money for repairs.
- Temperate climates are mild climates in the temperate zones between the tropics and the polar regions.
- Urine is one of your body´s ways of getting rid of waste.
- Whales keep in touch with sounds called phonations.
- Koalas are the sole living representatives of their family, but are distantly related to wombats.
- The Galilean moons are the four biggest of Jupiter's moons.
- Evidence for migrating dinosaurs comes from the positions of the continents at the time.
- The gauge (track width) used for the Stockton and Darlington was 4.7 ft, the same length as axles on horse-wagons.
- In the Northern Hemisphere, winds spiral in clockwise direction out of highs, and counterclockwise into lows.
- The autonomic nervous system is the body´s third nervous system.
- Anacondas spend much of their lives in swampy ground or shallow water, lying in wait for victims to come and drink.
- The aye-aye, a close relative of the lemurs, has huge ears and can hear grubs chewing wood beneath bark.
- During the first half of each monthly cycle, the Moon waxes from a crescent-shaped new moon to a full moon.
- Cathedrals are typically built in the shape of a cross.
- Drumlins are egg-shaped mounds of till.
- Carbohydrates includes chemical substances called sugars.
- The best pearls come from the Pinctada pearls oysters that live in the Pacific Ocean.
- An elephant uses eight grinding teeth at any one time.
- The Universe is getting bigger by the second. We know this because all the galaxies are zooming away from us.
- The Gobi covers much of southern Mongolia and parts of northern China
- In electrodynamic maglevs the trains rides on repulsing magnets.
- Hot spots stay in the same place while tectonic plates slide over the top of them.
- Your digestive tract is basically a long, winding tube called the alimentary canal (gut).
- The dodo was a flightless bird that once lives on islands such as Mauritius in the Indian Ocean.
- Blind mole rats of the eastern Mediterranean have skin-covered eyes.
- The whiter and hotter a main sequence star is, the brighter it shines.
- The microscopic structure of the bones found in coprolites shows the age of the prey when it was eaten.
- In diesel mechanicals, the power is transmitted from the diesel engine to wheels via gears and shalfts.
- The Great Barrier Reef is the world´s largest living thing, 1.260 mi long.
- The amount of blood in your size. An adult who weighs 175 lb has about 10.5 pt of blood.
- Flatfish start life as normal-shaped fish. As they grow older, one eye slowly slide around the head to join the other.
- Bonobos, or oygmy chimpanzees, are found in the dense forest along the Congo River.
- Radio telescopes are telescopes that pick up radio waves instead of light waves.
- Swivel joints turn like a wheel on an axle.
- Oceanic crust is the crust beneath the oceans.
- New York City has the world´s largest subway network, but unlike London´s most of it is quite shallow.
- Tyrannosaurus is not only one of the most famous of the dinosaurs, but also one about which a great deal is known.
- Millions of insect species live in rain forest, including butterflies, month, bees, termites, and ants.
- Tunda Wolves hunt larger prey than wolves further south, and tend to be larger themselves.
- Solar eclipses are possible because the Moon is 400 times smaller than the Sun, and is also 400 times closer to the Earth.
- The epidermis is made mainly of tough protein called Keratin, the remains of skin cells that die off.
- As a sub ducting plate sinks, the continental plate scrapes sediments off the ocean plate and piles them in great wedge.
- The VW Beetle was the brainchild of the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler who wanted a cheap car to be available for all Germans.
- Cetiosaurus was about 60 ft (18 m) long and weighed 33 tons.
- The arrow-poison frogs that live in the tropical rainforest of Central America get their name because natives arrows with deadly poison from glands in the frog´skin.
- The sun bear of Southeast Asia is the word´s smallest bear, at 27-65 kg).
- Spacecraft toilets have to get rid of waste in low gravity conditions.
- Reflex reactions work by short-circuiting the brain.
- As the Earth moves a quarter of the way around the Sun, the northern half begins to tilt away.
- One of the keys to the T was standardizations.
- Ostrich-dinosaurus probaby ate seeds, fruits, and other plant material.
- The bombardier beetle squirts out a spray of liquid from its rear en, almost like a small spray gun!
- Captive raccoons appear to wash food before eating it.
- SEM specimens (things studied) must be coated in a special substance such as gold.
- The lithosphere is only a few miles thick under the middle of the oceans.
- The Flying Scotsman was a locomotive designed by Sir Nigel GResley (1876 - 1941)
- Dravidosaurus was about 10 ft (3 m) in total length.
- Short-horned grasshoppers have ears on the side of their body.
- Grizzlies are immensely strong.
- More of the chemical carbon-14 is made in Earth when the Sun is more active.
- The axial skeleton is the 80 bones of the upper body.
- When volcano with a caldera subsides, the whole cone may collapse into the old magma chamber.
- Snowmobiles are vehicles with two skis at the front. and motor-driven track roll at the back.
- The teeth of Ormitholestes were small well spaced.
- Some sedimentary rocks, such as sandstone, are made from sand and silt.
- On the back of each vertebra is a bridge called the spinal process.
- The star Denneb is 60,000 times brighter than the Sun.
- Cape hunting dog can run at 60 km/h for 5km or more.
- The glass lizard has no legs.
- Fossils of the sauropod Barapasaurus were found in India.
- In 1830 Goldsworthy Gurney put a steam engine in a coach to make the first powered bus.
- If volcanoes in subduction zones emerge in the sea, they form a curving line of volcanic islands called an island arc.
- Organs are made from combinations of tissues.
- The second largest is Saturn´s moon Titan.
- Llama herders use the animal´s fur for rugs and ropes, their hides for candles.
- Each worker bee makes ten trips a day and visits 1,000 flowers each trip.
- A typical sauropod had a tiny head, a very long neck and tail, a huge, bulging body, and four massive legs,similar to those of an elephant, but much bigger.
- The dambusters were the Lancasters of 617 squadron of 1943 that attacked German dams with ¨bouncing bombs.¨
- Rift valleys are huge, though-shaped valleys created by faulting, such as Africa´s Great Rift Valley.
- The core of some bones, such as the long bones in an arm or leg, is called bone marrow.
- Halfway out from its center to its surface, the Sun is about as dense as water.
- Badgers are enthusiactic housekeepers.
- Flukes are flatworms that live a parasites inside other animals.
- In modern science, any animal with feathers is a bird.
- The ten millionth VW Beetle was built in 1965.
- After their milk teeth have gone, shrews usually only have one set of teeth.
- On the Moon´s surface are large, dark patches called seas, becasuse that is what people once belived they were.
- Each hair is rooted in a pit called the hair follicle.
- Mantle rock is so warm that it churns slowly round like very, very thick syrup boiling on stove.
- Otters live close to water and are excellents swimmers and divers.
- Most bats sleep during the day, hanging upside down in caves, attics, and other dark places.
- Bats are not blind.
- Gorillas are the biggest of all apes, weighing up to 500 lb (225 kg) and standing as tall as 6.5 ft (2 m).
- Lemurs are small furry creatures with long tails and big eyes.
- A beaver can swim underwater for half a mile (almost 1km).
- Koalas spend 18 hours a day sleeping.
- Beavers can chop down quite large trees with their incredibly strong front teeth.
- The grizzly bear is actually a brown bear with white fur on its shoulders.
- Frogs and toads are amphibians.
- To keep hens laying, their eggs must be collected daily.
- The Andean condor of South American is a gigantic scavenger which can carry off deep and sheep.
- Sharks have a better sense of smell than any other kind of fish.
- Crocodiles live in tropical rivers and swamps.
- A spitting cobra squirts venom into its attacker's eyes, and is accurate at 6ft (2m) or more.
- When on the defensive, a cobra rears up and spreads the skin of its neck in a hood to make it look bigger.
- Frogs and toads are amphibians.
- To keep hens laying, their eggs must be collected daily.
- Bottle-nosed dolphins get their name from their short beaks, which also make them look like they are smiling.
- Crocodilian species lived alongside the dinosaurs 200 million years ago.
- Frogs are mostly smaller and better jumpers.
- Chickens were first tamed 5,000 years ago.
- Swifts may fly through the night without landing.
- Most bird's eyes look out to the sides. but an owl's look straight forward like a human's.
- The Tasmanian wolf, or thylacine, was a meat-eating Australian marsupial.
- A sloth's large stomach is divided into many compartments.
- Tenrecs evolved live on the island of Madagascar.
- Antibiotic drugs are used to treat bacterial infections such as tuberculosis (TB) or tetanus.
- On average in Europe, men can expect to live about 75 years and women about 80.
- Most people live for between 60 and 100 years.
- About 1.5 pt (0.85 l) of blood shoots through your brain every minute.
- Girl's brains weigh 2.5 percent of their body weight.
- Lemurs are small furry creatures with long tails and big eyes.
- The largest penguin at 4ft (1.2m) tall, the emperor penguin also weighs in as the heaviest seabird.
- Storks are very large black-and-white water birds with long necks and legs.
- Herons usually nest in colonies called heronries.
- When hunting, a heron stands alone in the water, often on one leg, apparently asleep.
- Female chickens and turkeys are called hens. Male chickens are called rooster or cockerels.
- In breeding season, cocks strut and puff up their plumage to attract a mate.
- The super stream-lined blue shark lives is warm seas and is 12ft (4m) in lenght.
- Herons are arge wading birds that hunt for fish in shallow rivers.
- The California condor is very rare.
- A constrictor does not crush its victims.
- There are 700 plus species of iguana, nearly all of which live in the Americas.
- Stegosaurus had a tiny skull relative to its body sie, and a brain the size of a walnut.
- Most seals eat fish, squid, and shellfish.
- The super stream-lined blue shark lives is warm seas and is 12ft (4m) in lenght.
- Because the top of the wing is curved, air pushed over the wing speeds up and stretches out.
- Insects grow by getting rid of their old exoskeleton and replacing it with a bigger one.
- Today, the only reptiles that have an almost upright posture are crocodiles and alligators.
- A prevailing wind is a wind that blows frequently from the same direction.
- The scientific word for an elephant's trunk is a proboscis.
- The vampire bats of tropical Latin America feed on blood, sucking it from animals such as cattle and horses.
- Bats find things in the dark by giving out a series of high-pitched clicks.
- Gorillas are the biggest of all apes, weighing up to 500lb (225kg) and standing as tall as 6.5ft (2m).
- Flamingos live on the shellfish and oganisms to be found in the muddy waters of the lakes, marshes, and seas where they live.
- Herons are large wading birds that hunt for fish in shallow lakes and rivers.
- A kangaroo's tail can be over 5ft (1.5m) long.
- Motor nerves are connected to your muscles and tell your muscles to move.
- Sensory nerves are the nerves that carry information to your brain from sense receptors all over your body.
- Touch, or physical contact, is just one of the five sensations that are spread all over your body in your skin.
- The back of the tongue contains big round papillae shaped like an upside-down V.
- The lens is just behind the pupil.
- Urine gets its color from a yellowish blood waste called urochrome.
- A very hot day can sometimes make us feel uncomfortable.
- Lions (along with tigers) are the biggest members of the cat family, weighing up to 500 lb (230kg).
- The polar bear has a white coat to camouflage it against the Arctic snow when it is hunting seals.
- Polar bears often swim underwater and come up under an ice floe to tip seals off.
- Most lizards lay eggs, although a few give birth to live young.
- Turtles and tortoises live to a great age.
- Siphonophores are colonies of tiny creatures that live in the deep oceans.
- Deep-sea anglerfish live deep down in the ocean where is pitch black.
- The earliest horses had four toes per foot.
- Rock wallabies live on rocky outcrops.
- The puma ranges from southern Canada through North and Central America to Patagonia in South America.
- Many small animals cope with the desert heat by resting in burrows or sheltering under stones during the day.
- Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the fall.
- Parrots have feet with two toes pointing forward and two backward, allowing them to grip branches and food.
- The peacock of India and Sri Lanka is the most spectacular of all pheasants.
- Some animals frighten off predators with coloring that makes them look much bigger.
- When drinking, a giraffe has to spread its forelegs wide or kneel down to reach the water.
- The camel's stomach is huge, with three sections.
- A tiger's stripes make it instantly recognizable, but they make good camouflage in long grass and under trees.
- Wolves are the largest wild dogs.
- Beavers build dams across streams from tree branches laid on to a base of mud and stones.
- Most birds flap their wings to fly.
- The biggest bird ever is now extinct.
- There are two Kinds of hawks.
- The Eiffel Tower, On a clear day you can see 50 mi. in all direction from the top.
- The post supporting arches are called piers.
- Flatworms look like ribbons or as though an annelid worm has been ironed flat.
- Bands of male chimpanzees have been observed attacking and killing all the males in a neighboring band.
- In the core of star, hydrogen nuclei fuse to form helium.
- Continental crust is created in the volcanic arcs above subduction zones.
- The back plates of Stegosaurus may have been for body temperature control.
- Each receptor site on a nerve ending only reacts to certain neurotransmitters.
- The Pacific has some of the greatest tides in the world.
- Uranus is only faintly visible from Earth.
- The giant pandahas an unsuccessful zoo breeding record.
- A sea urchin´s spines are used for protection.
- Pagodas are tall tapering towers often linked to Buddhist temples.
- Phagocytes are big white blood cells that swallow up invaders and then use an enzyme to dissolve them.
- The joining and separating of the continents affected which kinds of dinosaurs lived where.
- Procompsognathus was another early meat eater.
- Amylase breaks down starches such as those in bread and fruit into simple sugars.
- In the 17th century theater moved indoors or the first time.
- Most bird´s eyes look out the sides, but an owl´s look straight forward like a human´s.
- The aardwolf is a small, insect - eating member of the hyena family.
- If civilizations like ours exist elsewhere, they may be on planets circling other stars.
- Drift is a blanket of debris deposited by glaciers.
- Drift is a blanket of debris deposited by glaciers.
- In China, pagodas were belived to bring happiness to the surrounding community.
- The first motorcycle was steam-powered, and built by the Michaux brothers in 1868.
- The basic sound produced by the vocal cords is a simple "aah".
- Learning to play the violin involves nondeclarative memory, in which nerve pathways become reinforced by repeated use.
- Some scientists claim that we humans are the only living things that are conscious.
- Some PNS nerves (Peripheral Nervous System) are as wide as your thumb.
- The swordfish can swim at up to 50 mph.
- Common genets are found in France and Spain.
- The numbers of sunspots reaches a maximum every 11 years.
- A two-year flood is a smallish flood that is likely to occur every two years.
- Fossils of 50 or so Triceratops have been found in the North America.
- Metal gears appeared in 87 bc and were later used for clocks.
- The biggest hole is in the base.
- Coelophysis belonged to the group of dinosaurs know as coelurosaurs.
- The strike of the fold is at right angles to the dip.
- Hubble`s Law showed that the Universe is getting bigger, and so must have started very small.
- Capybaras mate in the water, but give birth on land.
- The red-billed quelea of Africa is the world`s most abundant bird.
- Optical microscope specimens are thinly sliced and placed between two glass slides.
- Ford U.S. introduced weekly installment plans for new cars in 1923.
- The first propeller-driven snowmobile was buit in the 1920s.
- Bodcat kittens are taught to hunt by the age of seven month.
- Hair sheep are kept for their milk and meat.
- About 4.5 bilion year ago, a rock the size of Mars crashed into the Earth.
- In the 1930 Ettore Bugatti set out to build the best car ever with the Bugatti Royale.
- when the earth was still semi-molten, dense elements such as iron sank to form the core.
- the earliest denosaurs were small-to medium meat eaters with sharp teeth and claws.
- As the Earth formed, more space debris kept on smashing into it, adding new material.
- Frogs are mostly smaller and better jumpers.
- there are five species of freshwater dolphin living in Asian and South American rivers.
- Plinian eruptions are the most explosive kind of eruption.
- Some trucks are constructed in two parts, hinged at the join.
- Sauropelta had a row of sharp spikes along each side of its body, from just behind the eye to the tail.
- All different kinds of blood cell start life in red marrow as one type of cell called a stem cell.
- Blood clots also involue a lacy, fibrous network made from a protien called fibrin.
- Huge numbers of cheek teeth, arranged in rows, filled the back of a hadrosaur´s.
- The problem with pionner helicoters was control.
- Silecate minerals are made when metals join with oxygen and silicom.
- Monotremes are egg-laying mammals.
- Most seals eat fish, squid and shellefish.
- The brain´s cortex is also known as the cerebral cortex.
- As the Earth turns, the stars come back to the same place in the nigth sky every 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.09 seconds.
- Honey bees live in hives, eigth in hollow trees or in man-made beehive boxes.
- A mature male orangutan makes his presence known to other orangutans by braking branches, bellowing and groaning.
- Radiation fog forms on cold, clear, calm nights.
- In 2004 the 200 mph Tampa-Miami Overland Express open.
- Anchisaurus was one of the smallest prosauropods, at only 8ft logn and about 65 lb (30 kg).
- The biggest hole is in the base.
- A cell is basically a little package of organic (life) chemicals with a thin menbrane (casing) of protein and fat.
- Avimimus was a small, light dinosaur.
- The electron shells of all metals are less than half-full.
- The speed of earthquake waves reveals how dense the rocky materials are.
- Horses´eyes are set high in the head and far apart, giving almost all round vision.
- Most female butterflies live only a few days, so they have to mate and lay eggs quickly.
- Through his telescope Galileo saw that Jupiter has four moons.
- Fossils of Segnosaurus were found mainly in the Gobi Deset in Central Asia in the 1970s.
- Under certain conditions atoms can be split into more tham 200 kinds of short-lived subatomic particles.
- Early churches had square towers as landmarks to be seen from afar.
- The brain´s cortex is also known as the cerebral cortex.
- Horse-drawn stagecoaches were the first regular public coach services between two or more points or stages.
- Fossil evidence shows that manatees and dugongas have existed for about 50 million years (much longer than seals).
- Many butterflies are brigthly colored and fly by day.
- Garden eels live in colonies on the seabed, poking out from holes in the sand to catch food drifting by.
- Isomers are compounds with the same atoms but different properties.
- Scientists thought that the Mediteranean was a dry desert 6 million year ago.
- The front teeth of heterodontosaurus were smal, sharp and found only in the upper jaw.
- There is no oxygen in space, and the oxidizer suppilies the oxygen needed to burn fuel.
- The appendicular skeleton is the other 126 bones; the arm and shoulder bones, and the leg and hip bones.
- Male hammer-headed bats gather together in riverside trees called, leks, so thata the females can choose a mate from among them.
- The power output of diesel engine is limited,so high-speed trains are electric.
- Air pollution is probably a major cause of global warming.
- The Kea of New Zealand is parrot that eats meat as well as fruit.
- Astatine is an unstable element that survives by itself only briefly .
- A few cycads are still found today.
- Today the standard list of nonstellar objects is the New General Catalogue of nebulae and star clusters.
- The central coronal plane divides the body into front and back halves.
- The arm is made from three long bones.
- Pterosaurs are sometimes called pterodactyls.
- Most of the less common minerals are present in rocks in minute traces.
- Most profesional astronomers do not gaze at the stars directly.
- Marsupial mouse, marsupial rat and marsupial mole are the most popular names of australian marsupials.
- Nondeclarative memories are skills you teach yourself by practicing, such as playing badminton or the flute.
- The first great book of anatomy was written in 1543 by the Flemish scientist Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564).
- The first Rolls-Royce was made by Charles Rolls and Henry Royce.
- The 540 mph (870 km/h) German Messerschmitt Me 262 was the first jet fighter.
- Black smokers are technically known as hydrothermal vents.
- Black smokers are natural chimneys on the seabed.
- Africa es the world's second larger continent.
- The Himalayas are the world's highest mountains, with 14 peaks over 26,246 ft (8,000m) high).
- In 1982 scientists in Antarctica noticed a 50 percent loss of ozone over the Antarctic every spring.
- Weight for weight, bone is at least five times as strong as steel.
- Skulls vary in size and shape.
- Ligaments are cords attached to the bones on either side of a joint.
- The liver keeps the levels of glucose in the blood steady.
- Fats are either saturated or unsaturated.
- Your vulnerable eyes are protected by tears which wash away germens.
- The thyroid is a small gland about the size of two joined cherries.
- A spider has a nervous system with about 100,000 nerve cells.
- Although air is light, there is so much of it that air can exert huge pressure at ground level.
- Each hurricane is given a name in alphabetical order each year, from a list issued by the World Meteorological Organization.
- When you are asleep, many of your body functions go on as normal,even your brain goes on receiving sense signals.
- Although each eye gives a slightly different veiw of the world, we see things largely as just one eye sees it.
- There are two kinds of light-sensitive cell in the retina: rods and cones.
- If it is too hot, the hypothalamus sends signals to your skin telling it to sweat more.
- In passive immunization you are injected with substances such as antibodies that have already been exposed to the germ.
- Long chains of molecules that slide over each other easily make highly flexible plastics such as polythene.
- In 1982 scientist in Antarctica noticed a 50 percent loss of ozone over the Antarctic every spring.
- The Earth's surface changes all the time.
- Newton was born on December 25, 1642 in Woolsthorpe in Lincoln, England.
- The Celsius (C) scale is part of the metric system of measurements and is used everywhere except in the USA.
- Oxygen is one of the most reactive elements.
- Gravity dams are very thick dams relying entirely on a huge weight of concrete to hold the water.
- The cities of Ancient Greece and Rome were often carefully laid out, with mayor public buildings.
- The Golden Gate Bridge spans the entrance to San Francisco Bay in California.
- Like all reptiles, crocodilians get their energy from the sun.
- Reindeer bulls fight with their feet and rarely with their antlers.
- Most scientists say life's basic chemicals formed on Earth.
- Moons are generally too small and their gravity is too weak to hold on to an atmosphear.
- In the past, wetlands were seen simply as dead areas, ripe for draining.
- Ice Ages are periods lasting millions of years when the Earth is so cold that the polar ice caps grow huge.
- In the tropics raindrops grow in clouds by colliding with each other.
- Marshes and swamps are found in warm and cold places.
- Tree rings can be used to tell what the weather has been like in the past.
- Hoping is a good way to travel fast.Hoping is a good way to travel fast.
- Giraffes spend much of the hot day feeding from acacia trees, shoots, fruits, and vegetacions.
- Silver is a chemical element.
- Very few elements occur naturally by themselves.
- Chemical bonds link together atoms to make molecules.
- The first all-iron brigde was at Coalbrookdale, England.
- Streetcars are buses that run on rails laid through city streets.
- Like all reptiles, crocodiles rely on basking in the sun to gain energy for hunting.
- Most of the hundreds of species of octopus live on the beds of shallow oceans around the world.
- Coral reefs are the undersea equivalent of rainforest, teeming with fish and other ocean life.
- Jellyfish float around freely, moving by squeezing water out from beneath their body.
- North America is the world's third largest continent.
- As solid rock is weathered, the hill is covered in a layer of debris called regolith.
- High up in the mountains, much of a river's energy goes into carving into the riverbed.
- The chipmunk is a squirrel-like rodent found in North America.
- Pythons are tropical snakes that live in moist forests in Asia and Africa.
- Crows use at least 300 different croaks to communicate with each other.
- Giraffes are the tallest mammals, growing to more than 16.5 ft (5 m)
- Beavers feed on bark as well as tree roots ans shrubs.
- A rodent's front teeth , called incisors grow all the time.
- Humans are one of very few land mammals to have almost bare skin.
- Frogs are mostly smaller and better jumpers.
- There are thousands of enzymes inside your body.
- You can lose salt if you sweet heavily.
- Incisors are the four pairs of teeth at the front of your mouth.
- Milk teeth are the 20 teeth that start to appear when a baby is about six month old.
- Herbivores eat for much of the time.
- Dolphins take care of each other.
- Stingrays get their name from ther whip-like tail with its poisonous barbs.
- Your body has a variety of barriers, toxic chemicals, and booby traps to stop germs from entering it.
- Urine is most water, but there are substances dissolved in it.
- The kidneys are a pair of bean-shaped organs inside the small of the back.
- Enzymes are essential for the digestion, including lipase, protease, amylase, and the peptidases.
- On average in Europe, men can expect to live about 75 years and women about 80.
- Your genes are a mixture, half come from your mother and half from your father.
- Your brain seems to have two ways of remembering things for the long term.
- During an average lifetime, the heart pumps 53 million gl (200 million lt) of blood.
- The heart is a powerful pump made almost entirely of muscle.
- Fleas and lice are small wingless insects that live on birds and mammals, including humans.
- Termite nests are built like cities with many chambers, including a garden used for growing fungus.
- Free nerveendings are sort of like the bare end of a wire.
- Part of the brain that deals with smell is linked to the parts that deals with memories and emotions
- To stay upright, your body mst send a continual stream of data about its position to your brain.
- The black of the eye is lined with millions of light-sensitive cells.
- To reach water, giraffes havo to spread their front legs wide apart.
- All lemurs live on the island af Madagascar, were they evolve in isolation.
- Rats constantly investigate their environment.
- Island fruit bats are vulnerable to tropical storms that can blow them far out to sea.
- Asian elephants are the world's longest lived mammals after humans.
- Saturn is one of the fastest spinning of all the planets.
- The Galilean moons are the four biggest of Jupiter's moons.
- Black smokers are natural chimneys on the seabed.
- Fresh snow can contain up to 90 percent air.
- People in Japan have a long life expentancy.
- The bones of a baby's skeleton are fairly soft, to allow for growth.
- By the age of 20, you will have lost 20 percent of your sense of smell.
- Each of your two eyes gives you a slightly different view of the world.
- The iris is the colored, muscular ring around the pupil.
- Termite colonies are even more complex than ant ones.
- There are 22,000 species of bee. Some like leaf-cutter bees, live alone.
- Many butterflies are brightly colored and fly by day.
- Worms are long, wriggling, tube like animals.
- A zebra's stripes are as individuals as human fingerprints.
- Aggressive hippos warn off other hippos by opening their jaws to display their tusks.
- Australia's ghost bat is the continent's only meat-eating bat.
- Isaac Newton discovered that sunlight is made of all colors mixed together.
- Most plastics are polymers.
- Vitamins D and K are the only ones made in the body.
- Fats called triglycerids are stored around the body as adipose tissue (body fat).
- Glucose is a kind of sugar made by plants as they take energy form sunlight.
- There are 20 different amino acids - your body can make 11 of them.
- Scientists call breathing "respiration".
- Milk contains a mineral called calcium, wich is essential for building strong bones.
- The immune system is the body's defense against germs.
- Most turtles and tortoises eat plants and tiny animals.
- There are 700 plus species of iguana, nearly all of wich live in the Americas.
- Frogs and toads are meat eaters.
- There are about 3,500 species of frog and toad.
- Irregular galaxies are galaxies with no obvious shape.
- Power stations do not create energy.
- The elephant's large ears help it to control its temperature, as well as aiding its sense of hearing
- An elephant's trunk is a combination of upper lip and nose, and is used to place food into its mouth
- To reach water, giraffes have to spread their front legs wide apart.
- The Australian numbat is the only marsupial adapted to feed exclusively on ants and termites.
- Bats produce high-pitched sounds that cannot be heard by humans or other animals.
- The Golden Gate Bridge is one of the world's largest suspension bridges.
- In North America, beavers were once hunted so much that they were almost wiped out.
- Mice and rats belong to a group of 1,800 specie of small mammals called rodents.
- Koalas spend 18 hours a day sleeping.
- Like kangaroos, koalas are marsupials.
- Fur and fat protect mammals from the cold.
- Stellar's sea eagle is one of the most powerful of all birds.
- Energy goes on flowing from high to low until there is no difference to make anything happen.
- Energy that turns into heat may not be lost.
- Our main sources of natural light are th Sun and the stars.
- The name "koala" comes from an Aboriginal word meaning "no drink".
- African buffaloes gather together in herds of over 2,000.
- Newborn kangaroos are deaf as well asa naked and blind.
- Unlike other mammals, camels have oval instead of round bloodcells.
- The white cells made in bone marrow play a key part in the body's immune system.
- Your body is mostly water. Bones contains one-fifth water, while your brain is three-quarters water.
- About one-fifth of all deserts are seas of sand dunes.
- A baby elephant is fed by its mother for two years.
- Lion cubs are taken care of by several females until they are big enough to fend for themselves.
- The Tower of London is the oldest stone castle in London, started in 1066.
- Rope suspension bridges have been used for thousands of years.
- The cornea is a thin, glassy dish across the front of your eye.
- Rats are among the world's most successful mammals.
- Halogens are the chemical elements fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
- The huge bulge at the center of the Milky Way is about 20,000 light-years across and 3,000 thick.
- The visible surface layer of the Sun is called photosphere.
- The Sun is a medium-sized star measuring 864,948 mi (1,392,000 km) across.
- The space shuttle uses a huge fuel tank and two booster rockets to launch.
- Rope suspension bridges have been used for thousands of years.
- The friction that stops things starting to slide is called static friction.
- The largest-known wild lion was an African male, weighing 690 lb (313 kg).
- Meerkats live in groups of up to 30 individuals in a complex warren system.
- Some whales communicate with complex "songs".
- Many mammals carry their young around with them.
- Only a few animal species are true hibernators.
- Horses' eyes are set high in the head and far apart, giving almost all round vision.
- The koala will spend almost all of its life in eucaliptus trees.
- Hydrogen is one of the most reactive gases.
- Declination is like latitude.
- The first dinosaur eggs ever discovered were from Protoceratops.
- Tyrannosaurus may have taken between 20 and 50 years to reach adult size.
- Stegosaurus had the smallest known brain for its body size of any dinosaur.
- Drought bakes the soil so hard it shrinks and cracks.
- Clouds are the visible, liquid part of the moisture in the air.
- Giraffes are the tallest mammals, growing to more than 16.5 ft (5m).
- Tigers are the largest of the big cats, with huge heads.
- Sea otters will float on their backs for hours, eating or sleeping.
- Most bats sleep during the day, hanging upside down in caves, attics, and other dark places.
- Monkeys live mostly in trees, their hands have fingers and their feet toes for gripping branches.
- Arteries run alongside most of the veins that return blood to the heart.
- Planetary nebulae are thin rings of gas cloud which are thrown out by dying stars.
- The amount of heat reaching the ground depends on the angle of the Sun's rays.
- Arabian camels have one hump and live mainly in the Sahara desert and the Middle East.
- An owl's big eyes face straight forward to focus on an object.
- Geese mostly graze on grass.
- Frogs are superb jumpers, with long back legs to propel them into the air.
- Much livelier than the giant panda, the red panda is a nimble climber.
- To start moving, a skater uses the force of his muscles to push against the ground.
- Energy cannot be reused once has turned to heat and dissipated.
- The sun throws out huge quantities of radiation of all kinds.
- Barometers are used to detect changes in air pressure.
- Wind is moving air.
- Rain falls from clouds filled with large water drops and ice crystals.
- Amphibians are animals that live both on land and in water.
- Bees and wasps are narrow-waisted insects, usually with hairy bodies.
- Many minerals are made as magma cools.
- Amphibians are animals that live both on land and in water.
- Bees and wasps are narrow-waisted insects, usually with hairy bodies.
- Many minerals are made as magma cools.
- Seen from earth, the stars in a constellation appear to be the same distance away.
- Electricity is the energy that makes everything from toasters to televisions work.
- Candle wax contains a mixture of carbon and hydrogen.
- The Periodic Table is a chart of all the 100-plus different chemical elements.
- The colugo (also known as a flying lemur) is about the size of a domestic cat.
- Kangaroos are not restricted to Australia.
- Fats are greasy foods that will not dissolve in water.
- The four rearmost molars, one in each back corner of each jaw, are the wisdom teeth.
- If you sweat a lot during heavy excercise, you need to make up for all the water lost by drinking.
- The remains of Pompeii were discovered in the 18th century, wonderfully preserved under feet of ash.
- Earthquake prediction methods detect distortions of the ground that indicate the rock is under stres
- Seismologists make accurate surveys with ground instruments and laser beams bounced off satellites.
- Small flood are common; big flood are rare.
- Drought bakes the soil so hard it shrinks and cracks.
- Skunks are great diggers.
- When raindrops fall through sunlight they act as prisms.
- Electromagnetic radiation is pure energy.
- Many synthetic materials are polymers.
- Constellations are patterns of stars.
- Unlike other outer planets, Pluto is made from rock.
- Mercury is a planet of yellow dust, as deeply dented with craters as the Moon.
- North America is the oldest continent on the Earth.
- North America broke away from Europe about 100 million years ago.
- Earthquakes can begin as much as 435 mi (700 km) below the Earth's surface.
- The heart is a remarkable double pump, with two pumping chambers, the left and the right ventricles.
- Capillaries are the smallest vessels, only visible under a microscope.
- In old age the artery walls can become very stiff.
- As adults grow older, their bodies begin to deteriorate.
- Pollen can often cause allergies like hayfever.
- Microphones pick up sound wave and turn them into electrical signals.
- Pierre and Marie Curie were the scientist who discovered the nature of radioactivity.
- Black panthers are leopards with back pigmentation.
- Snow leopards, which inhabit the mountains of Central Asia, have never been know to roar.
- The polar bear is the only bear which is almost exclusively a meat-eater.
- The donkey evolved from African ass ancestors, and is capable of carrying heavy loads.
- Strong and healthy new born lambs are on their feet within minutes.
- The giraffe is the world's tallest animal.
- The South American capybara is the world's largest roedent.
- Many tropical bats, which eat pollen and nectar are important pollinators of plants.
- The celestial sphere is like a great blue ball dotted with stars, with the Earth in the middle.
- Mars' surface is cracked by a valley called the Vallis Marineris.
- Most of the nine planets in our Solar System have been known since ancient times.
- European and Asian reindeer have mainly gray topcoats, with fawn legs.
- Your vulnerable eyes are protected by tears which wash away germs.
- Doctors can get clues to illnesses by testing what substances there are in urine.
- The ancient Greeks realized that the Earth is a globe.
- The lithosphere is the upper, rigid layer of the Earth.
- Paleontologists tell the age of a fossil from the rock layer in which it is found.
- Laser light is a bright artificial light. It creates an intense beam that can punch a hole in steel.
- Steel ships float because although stell is denser than water, their hulls are full of air.
- Energy is measured in joules (J).
- The rhino has one or two horns, depending on species, perched on a tough area of the skull.
- A koala weighs less than 0.2 oz at birth, and remains in its mother's pouch for 7 months.
- Hippos are probably Africa's most dangerous animal.
- Horses have a very strong homing instincts.
- The more of the Sun's energy there is in the air, the windier it is.
- The more of the Sun's energy there is in the air, the windier it is.
- Pluto is tiny in comparison to the Earth, which is why it was so hard to find.
- Pluto was the last of all the planets to be discovered.
- Manatees and dugongs, known as sirenian, are the only vegetarian sea mammals in the world.
- The chipmunk is one of the most common small mammals in North America.
- The Wright brothers, Orville and Wilbur, built the world's first successful plane, the Flyer.
- The biggest and strongest steam locomotives ever were nicknamed "Big Boy".
- Vaccination is also called immunization, it builds up your resistance or immunity to a disease.
- The Apollo 13 mission to the Moon suffered near tragedy when an explosion ripped through one module.
- All river channels tend to wind, and the nearer they are to sea level, the more they wind.
- As temperature rises, solids melt to become liquids.
- Glass is one of the most versatile materials, transparent, easily molded, and resistant to weather.
- Velociraptor lived 75-70 million years ago, in what is now the barren scrub and desert of Mongolia.
- The arms and hands of Tyrannosaurus were so small that they could not pass food to its mouth.
- If you sweat a lot during excersice, you need to make up for all the water you have lost by drinking
- Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) was a great Italian mathematician and astronomer.
- The world's climate is changing all the time, getting warmer, colder, wetter, or drier.
- The air is not warmed much by the Sun directly.
- The chemicals involved in a chemical reaction are called the reactants.
- Light is just one of the forms of electromagnetic radiation.
- Light is a form of energy.
- Troikas are Russian sleighs (or carriages) drawn by three horses.
- The first bicycle was the 1818 "draisienne" of Baron de Drais.
- An echo is the reflection of a sound.
- To convert Celsius to Fahrenheit, divide by 5, multiply by 9 and add 32.
- Seismic gaps are places in active earthquake zones where there has been no earthquake activity.
- Tectonic plates are moving all the time, by about 4 in (10 cm) a year.
- W. A. Bentley was an American farmer who photographed thousands of snowflakes through microscopes.
- The vocal cords are soft flaps in the larynx, situated at the base of the throat.
- The first U.S. space station was Skylab.
- Quasars are the most distant known objects in the Universe.
- Baby porcupines are born with soft quills to make the birth easier.
- Baby big cats are called cubs.
- Only male lions have a mane, which shows off their size, and also protects them during fights.
- Like us, apes have long arms, and fingers and toes for gripping.
- A reptile's skin looks slimy, but it is quite dry.
- Deserts suffer from permanent drought.
- A drought is a long period when there is too little rain.
- Essentials oils are thin, perfumed oils from plants.
- Iron is never found in its pure form in the Earth's crust.
- Most spiders have a poisonous bite which they use to stun or kill they prey.
- Eels are long, slimy fish that look like snakes.
- The Sun can be used to generate electricity.
- Hamada is desert that is strewn with boulders.
- The Moon's landscape has barely changed over billion of years.
- Molars are the (usually) six pairs of big, strong teeth at the back of your mouth.
- Water drops and ice crystals in thunderclouds are buffeted together.
- Snow is often slow to melt after it has covered the ground.
- The world's biggest fish is the whale shark, which can grow to well over 40 ft (12 m) long.
- Sheep were first domesticated over 10,000 years ago.
- The time from mating to birth is called the gestation period.
- Birds of prey lay only one or two eggs at a time.
- The heartbeat is the regular squeezing of the heart muscle to pump blood around the body.
- The study of the shape of the Earth is called geodesy.
- Antarctic icebergs last for ten years on average.
- The Age of Dinosaurs came to a fairly sudden end 65 million years ago.
- Spiders are hunters and most of them feed mainly on insects.
- Whales, dolphins, and porpoises are large mammals called cetaceans.
- Constrictors usually swallow victims whole, then spend days digesting them.
- Motor nerves cross over from one side of your body to the other at the top of your spinal cord.
- Lack of sleep can be dangerous. A newborn baby needs to 18 to 20 hours sleep a day.
- The thyroid secretes three important hormones: tri-iodothyronine, thyroxine, and calcitonin.
- Blood carries oxygen and food to body cells, and takes carbon dioxide and other waste away.
- The nucleus of an atom is made up of two kinds of particle: protons and neutrons.
- Oxygen is the second most plentiful element on Earth, making up 46 percent of the Earth's crust.
- Oils are liquids that do not dissolve in water and burn easily.
- The body's thirst center is the hypothalamus.
- The leopard is by far the best climber of the big cats.
- The bumblebee bat of Thailand is the world's smallest mammal.
- Most streams in deserts flow only occasionally, leaving dry stream beds called wadis or arroyos.
- The people of the Ice Age risked their lives to hunt the fierce woolly mammoth.
- Like reptiles today, dinosaurs had claws or similar hard structures at the ends of their digits.
- The full name of Tyrannosaurus is Tyrannosaurus Rex, which means "king of the tyrant reptiles".
- Your spinal cord is about 17 in (43 cm) long and 0.4 in (1 cm) thick.
- SETI is the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence.
- Observatories are special places where astronomers study space.
- Pandas have an inefficient digestive system.
- Reindeer are the only deer in which both male and female have antlers.
- A beaver signals danger by smacking the water with its tail.
- Sharks have a skeleton made of rubbery cartilage.
- Sharks have a skeleton made of rubbery cartilage.
- Giant planets have now been detected orbiting stars other than the Sun.
- Sir Isaac Newton was one of the greatest scientists.
- Energy is never lost nor gained; it simply moves or changes.
- Proteins are needed to build and repair cells.
- Normal pulse rates vary between 50 and 100 beats a minute.
- The cardiovascular system is the heart and the blood circulation.
- Milk and its products, such as butter and cheese, are key sources of calcium.
- Quasars are extremely lumious objects at the center of some distant galaxies.
- The coldest places in the world are the North and South Poles.
- One definition of a hill is high ground up to 1,007 ft (307 m) high.
- Wetlands are areas of land where the water level is mostly above the ground.
- Rockets work by burning fuel.
- The wrist is one of the best places to test the pulse.
- In deep water tsunamis travel almost unnoticeably below the surface.
- An ecosystem is a community of living things interacting with each other and their surroundings.
- Antarctica is one of the driest places on Earth, with barely any rain or snow.
- Advection fog forms when warm, moist air flows over a cold surface.
- Auroras are bright displays of shimmering light.
- Galaxies are often found in groups called clusters.
- Metals are usually shiny.
- Coordination means balanced or skillful movement.
- Sea anemones are tiny, meat-eating animals that look a bit like flowers.
- Beavers are large rodents with flat, paddle-like tails.
- Hydrocarbons are compounds made only of carbon and hydrogen atoms.
- Temperature is how hot or cold something is.
- Copper is one of the few metals that occur naturally in a pure form.
- Atoms are tiny particles that build together to make every substance.
- Animals sense the world in a variety of ways, including by sight, hearing, touch, smell, and taste.
- Otters are small hunting mammals that are related to weasels.
- Cumulus clouds are fluffy white clouds.
- Oases are places in the desert that have water supplies.
- Astrologers believe that the movements of planets and stars have an effect on people's life.
- Constellations are simple patterns.
- Most lights in the sky are stars.
- Meteoroids are the billions of tiny lumps of rocky material that hurtle around the Solar System.
- Rain falls from clouds filled with large water drops and ice crystals.
- Most fuels are chemicals called hydrocarbons.
- Camels sweat very little, to save moisture.
- Monkeys from the Americas live in trees and often have muscular tails that can grip like a hand.
- Flamingoes are large pink wading birds which live in huge colonies on tropical lakes.
- When you remember something, your brain probably stores it by creating new nerve connections.
- The motor cortex is a band just in front of the sensory cortex.
- The solar system has nine planets including Pluto.
- The first space station was the Soviet Salyut 1, launched in April 1971.
- Vicuñas can live at altitudes of 18,000 ft (5,486 m), where the air is too thin for most mammals.
- The sloths of South America has the most neck vertebrae of any mammal.
- The spinal cord is the bundle of nerves running down the middle of the backbone.
- Diplodocus was a huge plant-eating dinosaur belonging to the group known as the sauropods.
- Antarctica is the ice-covered continet at the South Pole.
- Like clouds, mist is billions of tiny water droplets floating on the air.
- The biggest problem when lauching a spacecraft is overcoming the pull of Earth's gravity.
- Some planets, called terrestrial planets, have a surface of solid rock.
- Nebula was the word once used for any fuzzy patch of light in the night sky.
- The Taj Mahal in Agra in India is perhaps the most beautiful tomb in the world.
- Although galaxies are vast, they are so far away that they look like fuzzy clouds.
- The world's highest great lake is Lake Titicaca in South America (Perú).
- South America is the world's fourth largest continent.
- Global warming is the increase in average temperatures around the world.
- Meteorologist define fog as mist thats reduces visibility to less than 0.6 mi (1 km).
- Sometimes the folds are just tiny wrinkles a few inches long.
- Ant colonies are all female, most species have one or several queens which lay the eggs.
- Unlike humans, birds do not give birth to babies.
- Marrow is the soft, jelly-like tissue in the middle of certain bones.
- Cartilage is a rubbery substance used in various places around the body.
- Reflexes are muscle movements that are automatic.
- The Earth is one of the rocky planets, along with Mercury, Venus, and Mars.
- Moons are the natural satellites of planets.
- Your body loses heat as you breathe in cool air and breathe out warm air.
- Fats are important organic (life) substances, found in almost every living thing.
- Glaciers form when new snow falls on top of old snow.
- The most spectacular caves, called caverns, are found in limestone.
- The magnetic field around a planet or a star is called the magnetosphere.
- Medium-sized stars last for about ten billions years.
- Mars is the nearest planet to Earth after Venus.
- If you drink a lot, the saltiness of the blood is diluted.
- In active immunization you are given a killed or otherwise harmless version of the germ.
- Some dinosaurs left footprints when they walked on the soft mud or sand of riverbanks.
- Sharks are the most fearsome predatory fish of the seas.
- Dolphins communicate with high-pitched clicks called phonations.
- Crocodiles are often said to cry after eating their victims.
- Crocodilians are hunters that lie in wait for animals coming to drink at he water's edge.
- Some creatures mimic the colors of poisonous ones to warn predators off.
- There are around 17 different species of penguin.
- Elements are the basic chemicals of the Universe.
- Solar flares are sudden eruptions on the Sun's surface.
- Lava is hot molten rock from the Earth's interior.
- Most minerals are combinations of two or more chemical elements.
- The ribs are the thin, flattish bones that curve around your chest.
- Ligaments are cords attached to bones on either side of a joint.
- An arteriole is a smaller branch off an artery.
- Camels can go many days or even months without water.
- Tigers usually live alone, and males try to keep other males out of their territory.
- The bold coloring of the ladybug warns birds that it is not for eating.
- When in danger an octopus may send out a cloud of inky black fluid.
- Asteroids are lumps of rock that orbit the Sun.
- Calcium is a soft, silvery white metal.
- The Earth's surface is divided into slabs called tectonic plates.
- Air pollution can spread huge distances.
- Migration is when animals move from one place to another.
- Owls have huge eyes that allow them to see in almost pitch darkness.
- Why is the sand wet?
- Hippopotamuses are big, gray, pig-like creatures that live in Africa.
- Winter weather is cold because days are too short to give much heat.
- Caves are giant holes that run horizontally underground.
- Earthquakes are a shaking of the ground.
- The Arctic fox has incredibly thick fur to keep out the cold.
- Gray wolves often go for a week without food.
- Some porcupines collect bones, which they gnaw on to sharpen their teeth.
- Raptors is a nickname for the dromeosaur group.
- Butterflies are insects with four large wings.
- Ants are a vast group of insects related to bees and wasps.
- The Incas used llamas to carry secret messages tied into their fur.
- The name "elephant" means "visible from afar".
- Carbohydrates are foods made from kinds of sugar, such as glucose and starch.
- Tendon provided a link between muscle and bone.
- The vertebrae are separated by disks of rubbery material called cartilage.
- The skull looks as though it is a single bone.
- Seasons are periods in a year that bring changes in weather and temperature.
- Despite their name starfish are not fish.
- There are about ten species of barn owl.
- Mars's volcano Olympus Mons is the biggest in the solar system.
- Planets are never more than 20 percent of the size of their star.
- There are three kinds of spacecraft.
- Hurricans last, on average, 3 to 14 days.
- Your skeleton is a rigid framework of bones.
- At the center of the cell is the nucleus, this is the cell control center.
- The Patagonian puma has a hunting territory of up to 40 sq mi (100 sq km).
- The moon orbits the Earth once every month, with each orbits taking 27.3 days.
- Each atmosphere is very different.
- No other planet in the solar system has water on its surface.
- North America is the world's third largest continent.
- A molecule is two or more atoms bonded together.
- Light is just one of the forms of electromagnetic radiation.
- Apes are our closest relatives in the animal world.
- Birds have four kinds of wing feather: large primaries, smaller secondaries, coverts, and contours.
- Lizards cannot control their own body heat, and so rely on sunshine for warmth.
- Spiders are small scurrying creatures which have eight legs, and bodies with two parts.
- Stars are being born and dying all over the Universe.
- The oldest known rocks on Earth are 3,900 millions years old.
- Volcanic eruptions are produced by magma, the hot liquid rock under the Earth's surface.
- Groups of common dolphins, travelling and feeding together, may number up to 2,000 individuals.
- A chameleon can look forward and backward at the same time.
- Boas capture their prey by lying in wait, hiding motionless, and waiting for victims to pass by.
- Eagles and hawks are among 280 species of raptor (bird of prey).
- The Richter scale measures the magnitude of an earthquake on a scale of 1 to 10 using a seismograph.
- The atmosphere is a blanket of gases about 600 mi (1,000 km) deep around the Earth.
- About 100 artificial satellites are now launched very year.
- Astronauts must be extremely fit and also have very good eyesight.
- A tiger's stripes camouflage it as it hunts in the tall grasses by day.
- Wolves howl to avoid territorial fights.
- The giraffe's black tongue is almost 1.6 ft (0.5 m) long.
- You gain water by drinking and eating, and as a by-product of cell activity.
- The Moon is the brightest object in the night sky, but it does not give out any light itself.
- An atmosphere is the gases held around a planet by its gravity.
- A planet moves fastest when its orbits brings it nearest to the Sun (called its perihelion).
- The tiny atoms and molecules from which every substance is made are always moving.
- Like all sounds, musical sounds are made by something vibrating.
- Constrictors are snakes that squeeze their victims to death, rather than poisoning them.
- The heart of a star reaches 60.8 million ·F (16 millions ·C).
- Glaciers are rivers of slowly moving ice. They form in mountain regions when it is too cold for snow
- The South American jaguar is America's only big cat.
- Leopards have survived successfully because they will eat almost anything, from crabs to baboons.
- Before spraying, a skunk warns its enemy by stamping its feet.
- Beneath its thick white fur, a polar bear's skin is black.
- The technical name for going outside a spacecraft is Extra-Vehicular-Activity (E.V.A.)
- Veins are pipes in the body for carrying blood back to the heart.
- Astronomers list the stars according to their brightness, using the Greek alphabet.
- One of the biggest - ever eruptions occurred 2.2 millions years ago in Yellowstone.
- Waterfalls may form where the river flows over a band of hard rock, such as a volcanic sill.
- Crocodiles, alligators, caimans, and gharials are reptiles that form the group known as crocodilians
- Ducks have shorter necks and wings, and flatter bills than swans.
- Parrots are colorful birds with curved bills for eating fruits and seeds and for craking nuts.
- A transfusion is when you are given blood from another person's body.
- Fats are an important source of energy.
- A galaxy is a vast group of stars, and the Milky Way is the galaxy we live in.
- Comets are bright objects with long tails, which we sometimes see streaking across the night sky.
- Male lions have the job of protecting the pride, leaving the hunting to the females most of the time
- Mountain lions are the largest American desert carnivores.
- Beavers are born with innate dam-building instincts.
- Touch, is just one of the five sensations that are spread all over your body in your skin.
- Uranus is the seventh planet out from the sun.
- Owls are nocturnal and hunt by night, unlike most other hunting birds.
- The dog family is a large group of four-legged, long-nosed, meat-eating animals.
- Insects have a body divided into three sections: which is why they are called insects "in sections"
- Vehicles designed to move on snow are supported on flat boards called runners, skids, or skis.
- New York's Statue fo Liberty stands on Liberty Island off the tip of Manhattan.
- An artery is a tubelike blood vessel that carries blood away from the heart.
- Carbohydrates in food are your body's main source of energy.
- Octopuses and squid belong to a family of mollusks called cephalopods.
- Turtles and tortoise are reptiles that live inside hard, armored shells.
- Friction is the force that acts between two things rubbing together.
- Most sounds you hear, from the whisper of the wind to the roar of a jet, are simply moving air.
- Elements are the basic chemicals of the Universe.
- Your heart is the size of you fist.
- Most birds sit on their eggs to keep them warm until they are ready to hatch.
- Vultures and condors are the biggest birds of prey.
- Reptiles are cold-blooded, but this does not mean that their blood is cold.
- Things float because they are less dense in water.
- Hydrogen is the lightest of all gases and of all elements.
- Nuclear power is based on the huge amounts of energy that bind together the nucleus of every atom.
- Many fish species live in warm seas around coral reefs.
- Your diet is what you eat.
- Blood transfusions are given when someone has lost too much blood due to an injury or operation.
- Cells are the basic building blocks of your body.
- Anatomy is the study of the structure of the human body.
- Hundreds of kinds of dinosaur were herbivores, or plant eaters.
- Dinosaur claws were probably made from keratin.
- Body salts are not simply the salt (sodium chloride) some people sprinkle on food.
- Cathedrals are the churches of Christian bishops.
- Satellite are objects that orbit planets and other space objects.
- Radiation is energy shot out at high speed by atoms.
- Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) discovered the basic rules about the way the planets move.
- Marsupials probably originated in America some 100 millions years ago.
- Chimps have a strict social ladder, with dominant male at the top.
- Indian ruler Shah Jehan ordered to build the Taj Mahal in honor of his favorite wife Mumtaz Mahal.
- A kind of jet engine was built by the Ancient Greek Hero of Alexander in the first century AD.
- The Korean War oh the 1950s saw the first major combat between jet fighters.
- Unlike most cats, cheetahs can hardly retract their claws at all.
- In wolf packs, only the dominant female normally mates and has cubs.
- Reindeer have a well developed homing instintic.
- The skunk squirts a sticky spray at its enemy from glands under its tail.
- The American kangaroo rat may never take a drink of water in its life.
- Elephants are very intelligent animals, with the biggest brain of all land animals.
- Not all birds can fly, but they all have feathers.
- Reptiles are scaly-skinned animals which live in many different habitats mainly in warm regions.
- Astronomy is the study of the night sky, from the planets and moons to the stars and galaxies.
- Space telescopes are launched as satellites so we can study the Universe.
- Mars is called the red planet because of its rusty red color.
- The heartbeat is a sequence called the cardiac cycle.
- Vitamins are substances the body needs to help maintain chemical processes inside cells.
- It takes less than 90 seconds on average for the blood to circulate through the body.
- An adult's skeleton has 206 bones joined together by rubbery cartilage.
- Pyramids are found not only in Egypt.
- The world's largest airport is King Abdul Aziz in Saudi Arabia. It covers 55,500 acres.
- In 1905 most cars were "coach-built" which meant they were individually built by hand.
- Female domestic dogs can have two litters of puppies a year.
- Some dogs can sense when their owner is about to have an epileptic fit.
- St Bernard rescue dogs work in teams of three.
- If there has been no earthquake in an earthquake zone for a while, there will be one soon.
- Earthquake waves are the vibrations sent out through the ground by earthquakes.
- The Earth is not a perfect sphere.
- Astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped on to the Moon for the first time on July 20, 1969.
- Payload specialist are not NASA astronauts.
- Spacecrafts toilets have to get rid of the waste in low gravity conditions.
- Dinosaurs may have made sounds to keep in touch with other members of their herd.
- Tropical bats are important pollinators of plants, including some trees.
- Rats are among the world's most successful mammals.
- The snow leopard is also known as the ounce.
- Crocodiles often swallow stones.
- Space suits protect astronauts when they go outside their aircraft.
- Damage to the spinal cord can cause paralysis.
- The majority of dinosaur fossils have been found in North America.
- Europe is the smallest continent.
- Gravity on the Moon's surface is only one-sixth as strong as on Earth.
- The Nazca Lines in Perú, are only clearly seen from the air.
- European domestic cattle are descended from the aurochs.
- Small owls eat mostly insects.
- Life on Earth probably began 3,800 million years ago.
- A baby's brain is one of the fastest growing parts of its body.
- The Diplodocus had the longest tail.
- Three-quarters of South America is in the tropics.
- All light comes from Atoms.
- Versailles is perhaps the most expensive palace ever built.
- The domestic horse is the only member of the horse family in which the mane falls to the side.
- The distance to the Moon is measured with a laser beam.
- Humans are among the few animals that mate at any time of the year.
- Digestion is the process of breaking down food into substances that can be used by the body.
- Gastroliths were stones that dinosaurs swallowed into their stomachs to help with their digestion.
- The Earth was formed about 4.57 thousand million years ago.
- Optical microscopes use lenses to magnify images up to 2,000 times.
- The biggest Spanish galleons weighted over 1,000 tons.
- Hares are born with fur, with their eyes open.
- Fleas jump with over 20 times the force required to launch a space rocket.
- Jupiter has no surface for a spacecraft to land on.
- Tendons are cords that tie a muscle to a bone or to another muscle.
- The biggest dinosaurs were the sauropods.
- In 1645 BC the Greek island of Thera erupted.
- Electromagnetism is the combined effect of electricity and magnetism.
- Supersonic planes travel faster than the speed of sound.
- A Cheetah can accelerate from 0 to 45 mph (72 km/h) in 2 seconds.
- Meteors are space objects that crash into Earth's atmosphere.
- When you exercise, your body burns up energy faster.
- Bats are the only flying mammals.
- No one knows for sure how long dinosaurs lived.
- Rivers carve out valleys as they wear away their channels.
- Iron is the most common element in the world.
- China developed its own distinctive style of building over 3,000 years ago.
- Most penguins only take short naps.
- Penguins can be found anywhere in the Southern Hemisphere where there are cold ocean currents
- Penguins have salt-filtering glands
- The Emperor penguin is the largest of all the penguins.
- Penguins are densely feathered.
- Some penguins reproduce in the Antartic during the winter.
- Penguins spend up to 75% of their life in the water.
- The polar bear's favorite food is seals.
- Female polar bears may go without eating for up to 8 months.
- Penguins and Polar Bears live in opposite ends of the world.
- The Moon's gravity is 17 percent of Earth's.
- Protective coloring helps an animal hide from its enemies or warns them away.
- Dinosaurs had scales, like today's reptiles.
- The Earth's crust is a thin hard outer shell of rock.
- Archimedes was one of the first great scientists.
- When you heat a substance its molecules move faster.
- The earliest known dam was built in Egypt.
- The earliest-known ancestor of the horse, was the size of a small dog.
- Genes are the body's chemical instructions for your entire life.
- More than 70 percent of all bird species are perching birds.
- The Earth takes 365.24219 days to orbit the Sun.
- In 1201 an earthquake rocked every city in the easter Mediterranean.
- Fossils suggest that dinosaurs could have made a variety of sounds.
- Radiation is an atom's way of getting rid of its excess energy.
- The American plane Voyager flew around the world non-stop in nine days.
- The American least weasel is the world's smallest carnivore
- The Central Nervous System is made up of the brain and the spinal cord
- All birds begin life as eggs
- Binaries stars are double stars
- In 1996, an ozone hole appeared over the Arctic for the first time
- Edmontosaurus probably made trumpeting noises
- Sounds over 130 dB (decibels) are painful
- Bus is short for "omnibus"
- The black rat spread the bubonic plague in Europe
- The liver is your body's chemical processing center
- Dolphins are mammals, not fish
- Water is the only substance on Earth which is commonly found as a solid, a liquid, and a gas
- A hurricane generates the same energy every second as a small hydrogen bomb
- Nodosaurs were armored dinosaurs that lived 150-65 million years ago
- Energy cannot be destroyed, but it can be burned up
- The Inca people of Perú domesticated llamas and alpacas
- The world's biggest dam is in Russia
- A baby's head is 1/4 of its total body weight
- The bluefin tuna can grow to up to 12 feet (4 meters) in length
- The first artificial satellite was the Sputnik 1
- Mount Wai-'ale-'ale, in Hawaii, is the world's rainiest place
- Before the 1820's people didn't know that dinosaurs existed
- Albert Einstein was the most influential scientist of the 20th century
- Elephants once lived in the Sahara
- The Saturn V rocket is the most powerful rocket ever built
- There are over 5 million color-detecting cones in the retina of each eye
- Most poisonous insects are brightly colored
- Dwarf stars are small stars of low brightness
- Smog is a thick fog
- The smallest fossil dinosaur found to date are of the Mussaurus
- All solids are slightly elastic
- Raccoon skin was used as money
- Railroads were invented long before steam power
- The eyes are tough balls that are filled with a jelly-like substance
- Reptiles were the first large creatures to live entirely on land
- Heroes and creatures of greek myth provided the names for many constellations.
- A flood occurs when a river or the ocean rises so much that it spills over the land.
- Fossils are the remains of once-living things that have been preserved in rocks.
- Four fundamental forces operate throughout the Universe
- Lemmings will cross any water in their path as they migrate
- Prehistoric humans rarely lived in caves
- The sense of taste is the crudest of our five senses
- Most lizards can change colors
- Planets begin life at the same time as their star
- The word "volcano" comes from Vulcano Island
- "Kentrosaurus" means "spiky reptile"
- No clock keeps perfect time
- Ants have very strong jaws
- Blood can be either Rhesus positive (Rh+) or Rhesus negative (Rh-)
- There are 4 main types of blood
- The Akashi-Kaikyo bridge is the world longest suspension bridge
- The large meat-eating dinosaurs where knows as "carnosaurs"
- A flash of lightning is brighter than 10 million 100-watt light bulbs
- Hovercrafts can travel over land or water
- A supernova is the explosion of dying supergiant star
- The box jellyfish has one of the deadliest poison
- Newborn babies breathe about 40 times a minute
- Anteaters have no teeth
- Chromosomes carry your body's life instructions
- Galaxies are giant groups of stars
- Castles were fortress homes of powerful men.
- The longest cave system is the Mammoth Cave
- Dinosaurs lived in the Mesozoic Era
- A song can shatter glass
- Bears are omnivores
- The Andes is the world's longest mountain range
- The Iguanodon was one of the first dinosaurs to be given a name
- Sound travels a million times slower than light
- The Basilisk lizard can walk on water
- There are 33 vertebrae in the spine
- The most powerful rocket ever was the Saturn 5
- Europe only has one type of primate
- Electricity is made by electrons
- The world's largest earthworm is 7 yards (6.5 meters) long
- Sunspots are dark spots on the Sun's surface
- All living things are based on carbon
- Tigers eat a variety of foods
- Vaccination prevents disease
- The Parasaurolophus had the longest head crest
- Bronze is the oldest of all alloys
- The giant flying squirrel performed the longest glide ever recorded
- The largest pyramid is the Great Pyramid of Giza
- Your brain gets millions of nerve signals every second
- The male emperor penguin hatches eggs
- The city of Benxi used to be called a "city invisible from satellites"
- The world's first airport was built in 1928
- Stars are basically balls of burning gas
- Mass is the amount of matter in an object
- Giant and Red Pandas have an extra "thumb"
- All your body is made from tissue and tissue fluid
- The Quetzalcoatlus was the largest flying animal ever
- Peacocks were considered treasures
- The biggest eruption in the past 50 years occurred in the Philippines
- The Lunar 9 was the first vehicle to land on the Moon
- The Colosseum was a sports arena built in ancient Rome
- Horns were most common among the plant-eating dinosaurs
- Most volcanoes are found around the Pacific Ocean
- Mercury is nearest planet to the Sun
- Bats emit high-frequency sounds
- The human nose can detect many scents
- Marsupials have short pregnancies
- Hurricanes are powerful, whirling tropical storms
- Most electricity is generated in power stations
- The Greenhouse Effect keep the Earth warm
- A toucan's beak is much longer than its body
- Constellations are patterns of stars in the sky
- The Vernal Equinox marks the first day of spring
- Fluorides are added to water
- The Achilles tendon is named after a greek hero
- The deepest drill into the earth is in the Arctic
- Triton is the coldest place in the Solar System
- Howler monkeys can be heard from miles away
- The Nazca Lines can only be clearly seen from air
- Leonardo da Vinci drew a design for a parachute around 1500
- Great white sharks are the biggest meat-eating sharks
- The Incas built stoned paved roads
- Hummingbirds beat their wings 90 times per second
- The world's smallest mammal is the bumblebee bat
- The Blue Whale is the world's largest mammal
- Astronauts sleep floating in the air
- Babies have a strong sense of smell
- Petroleum is used to make many products
- There are 91 known moons in the Solar System
- The tiniest bone in your body is the stirrup bone
- The Pacific is the world's largest ocean
- Hibernating mammals wake up by shivering violently
- Blood circulates at different speeds
- Many dinosaurs hunted in packs
- Solar flares have the energy of a million atom bombs
- "Arctic" comes from "Bear"
- Call across the ocean use satellites and cables.
- Clouds are made out of water
- A pulsar is a neutron star
- The worlds highest falls are in Venezuela
- Diamonds are over 3,000 million years old
- Beluga whales were called "sea canaries"
- The Milky Way belongs to the Local Group
- Copper was used over 10,000 years ago
- The Eiffel Tower was built in 1889
- Butterflies can only fly when warm
- Magnetism is an invisible force
- Tarantulas are not dangerous to humans
- Mercury is the planet with the shortest year
- The earliest known bird is the Archaeopteryx
- Water can be a solid, a liquid, and a gas
- Jupiter is the biggest planet in the Solar System
- Antarctica is the coldest place on Earth
- Atoms are the building blocks of the Universe
- The Tyrannosaurus weighted 7 tons
- Light is the fastest thing in the Universe
- There are more than 200 types of cell in your body
- Snow is crystals of ice
- Horses were domesticated 6,000 years ago
- The first skyscrapers were built in the 1880s
- There are more than 500 breeds of domestic dog
- Triceratops is the best known dinosaur
- Plastic are synthetic materials
- The Earth formed about 4,750 million years ago
- Your body needs water to function
- The first gasoline-powered car was created in 1885
- Australia is a country and a continent
- Llamas spit to show anger
- Dinosaurs could walk on two feet
- Holograms are made with laser lights
- The color of a star depends on its temperature
- All chickens came from India
- Quasars are as bright as 100 galaxies
- Oxygen turns blood red
- Antarctica was joined to Australia
- The first dinosaur fossils were found in England
- The first passenger monorail was built in 1825
- There are three states of matter
- No one knows what colors dinosaurs were
- A squirrel's bite won't give you rabies
- Antibodies protect your body
- There used to be only one continent on Earth
- Sounds travel faster through water than through air
- Mice don't really like cheese
- The sun is about 5 billion years old
- Elephants are good swimmers
- Antarctica is the largest desert on Earth
- Heat is the energy of moving molecules
- The Universe began about 15 billion years ago
- The Ornithomimus was the fastest dinosaur of all
- Bats are the only true flying mammals
- Monarch butterflies can fly across the ocean
- Your body gets warmer when you get sick
- Aluminum is the most common metal
- The Andean Condor is the world's biggest flying bird
- The body is mainly made of water
- The first dinosaurs are 230 million years old
- One side of the Moon can't be seen from Earth
- Smells are molecules
- The potato was born in Perú
- Tushka's Cool Jokes
- Why don´t grasshoppers go to lacrosse games?
- What position do camels play on baseball teams?
- How do surfers greet each other?
- What do yo call wood that has nothing to play with?
- If Michael Jordan gets athlete´s foot, what does Santa get?
- What´s baby sparrow´s favorite game?
- why did the pecan work out?
- How do bees star their exercises?
- How do witches work out?
- Where do trains work out?
- How do locomotives work out?
- What happens to vacuum cleaners at a busy mall?
- Why aren´t gorillas allowed in furniture stores?
- What´s the best time to shop for sporting goods?
- Which customers avoid early-bird sales?
- Did you hear about the two racing silkworms?
- Why do department stores like cats?
- What did the duck say when she bought lipstick?
- Where do animals go when they lose their tails?
- How does Dracula tell time?
- How do little vampires get to sleep?
- Why did the werewolf read The Lord of the Rings 50 tines?
- What do baby ghost get when they fall down?
- How do ghost avoid computer eyestrain?
- What kind of construction vehicle does a ghost drive?
- What do ghosts, wash their hair with?
- Do mummies like being mummies?
- Where do skeleton live?
- What did the lamp say when the owner turned it off?
- How do you welcome an angel?
- How do you welcome a sailor?
- How do you welcome a skydiver?
- what´s giraffe´s favorite fruit?
- What do you call a tiger in the snow?
- What animal is smarter than a talking parrot?
- What kind of cars do hummingbirds drive?
- What do you call sheep that join law enforcement.
- How do reindeer kill insects?
- why do grizzly bears live in caves?
- What kind of plane does an elephant fly?
- What do roses call each other?
- What happens when you slip on thin ice?
- What were Tarzan´s last words?
- Why is the letter D so aggravating?
- What is purple and member of your family?
- Which is the smartest pickle?
- When is a person not a person?
- What did the chocolate bar say to the lollipop?
- What is a pickle´s all time favorite musical.
- How does the earth fish?
- What time do ducks is a sharpshooter?
- Why do ducks have webbed feet?
- What kind of soda can´t you drink?
- What kind of illumination did Noah use on the ark?
- When do comedians take milk and sugar?
- What is a comedian´s favorite breakfast cereal?
- What game do baby chckens play?
- What was Dr. Jekyll´s favorite game?
- What musical instrument do bank robbers like best?
- Do choirs like to sing?
- What goes from city to city but never moves?
- What city never stays in the same place?
- What animal has big ears and eats carrots?
- What is the fastest land animal?
- What dog whines the most?
- Where do horses live?
- Do you think the gingerbread man is weird?
- Why did the two-headed monster win every race?
- Why did one Cyclops get along so we with the other?
- What´s monster´s favorite cheese?
- Doctor Doctor, nobody understands me.
- What is ¨out of bound¨?
- What is hail?
- What is a muth?
- What is a polygon?
- What is ice?
- What is carafe?
- Why are cooks cruel?
- What did the pilot say as he left the bar?
- What nut sounds like a sneeze?
- Why did Kojak throw away the Keys?
- When is a black dog not a black dog?
- What gets wetter as it dries?
- Why does a horse have six legs?
- When does a horse have six legs?
- What does a deaf fisherman need?
- What is the definition of a harp?
- Why did the man comb his hair with his toes?
- If a buttercup is yellow, what color is a hiccup?
- What did the policeman say to the three-headed man?
- What is the largest mouse in the world?
- ¨Doctor, doctor! I fell like a parrot.¨
- What´s brown and white, and runs around the forest crying ¨Mommy, Mommy¨?
- What´s the shortest bridge in the world?
- What´s tall, dark, and hamsome?
- What´s brown and squeaks when covered with milk?
- What is long, has a red hat and lies in a box?
- Where do gnomes live?
- What's round and bad tempered?
- What do lady sheep wear?
- What goes tick-tick woof-woof?
- Where will you always find diamonds?
- What was Noah's profession?
- Do you know what happens when you don't dust your mirror?
- How do you see King Arthur after it gets dark?
- What dogs are the best at telling time?
- When is the best time of year to find frogs?
- What did the hip-hop singer want for his birthday?
- When is the best time of year to find frogs?
- Do vampires make mistakes?
- What insect is the best musician?
- Where do insects shop?
- What dogs are the best at telling time?
- What is bunny fur?
- What happend when the cowboy called the cows?
- What do you get if you cross a pecan and a lobster?
- What do you get if you cross a dollar bill with a kangaroo?
- What do you get if you cross a platypus with a beaver?
- What do you get if you cross a hummingbird with a fly?
- What size soap do judges use?
- What's worse than being a two-ton witch?
- What do little ghosts prefer to frisbees?
- How do dentists fiz a dragon teeth?
- Why did the clock get kicked out of school?
- What's black and white and pink all over?
- What do tightrope walkers eat?
- What do you call a mistake you keep making and that you know you've made before?
- What did they called Old Macdonald when he joined the Army?
- What kind of dog washes clothes?
- Why don't elephants play basketball?
- What's a mouse's favorite television show?
- What's the quickest way for an ant to get to the top of a tree?
- Where does a lion go to exercise?
- What did the girl centipede say to the boy centipede at the dance?
- What do you call a rolled-up rabbit?
- What do planets like to read?
- What do mangos like to read?
- What do you call a pig that takes acting lessons?
- What happened to the guy who got his head stuck in the washing machine?
- What happened when they crosseda pit bull with a computer?
- How do you praise a computer?
- What do you call a rolled-up rabbit?
- Do you mind my smoking these cigars?
- What´s your new dog´s name?
- Do you sell cat´s meat?
- Why does an ostrich have such a long neck?
- What's yellow and goes "tick tock, tick tock"?
- What do you get if you cross a cow with a camel?
- What's a cat's favorite newspaper?
- What's smaller than a mite's mouth?
- What do you get if you cross an insect and a rabbit?
- What's a snowflake's dance called?
- What's green and jumps up and down?
- What's blue and chewed by whales?
- What's brown and yellow and flies along the bottom of the sea?
- What's furry, stings, collects nectar, and is difficult to hear?
- What's covered in feathers and cracks jokes?
- What's a mouse's favorite game?
- What's best for a sick horse?
- What would you call a bad-tempered gorilla with cotton wool in its ears?
- What's a caveman's favorite place to shop?
- Why did the cranberry turn red?
- What did the cloud say to the banker?
- What do you call an insect that wears a tuxedo?
- What tools do you need in math?
- How is food served to the man in the moon?
- What's white with black and red spots?
- What's creamy and good for sick pigs?
- What's gray, squeaks, and ruled Rome?
- What's brightly colored and goes "Hmmmm-choo", "hmmmm-choo"?
- What does a skunk do when it's angry?
- What's green and stands in the corner?
- What's a horse's favorite game?
- What's good for measuring dogs?
- What's a goose's favorite fruit?
- What's green on the outside and yellow inside?
- How do you catch a school of fish?
- How do bunnies stay cool in the summertime?
- How did the gorilla break out its cage?
- What does a hungry mathematician likes to eat?
- Why did the silly dentist throw out his electric toothbrush?
- Why didn't the kid want to use toothpaste?
- Why was the farmer angry?
- Why is the letter K like a pig´s tail?
- What do you call a cow that can´t give milk?
- What´s pink and grows under your nose?
- What makes a Maltese Cross?
- What´s mad and travels to the moon?
- What´s a ghost´s favorite dinner?
- What´s green, noisy and dangerous?
- When is a windows like a star?
- What is the equator?
- What is the Cheddar Gorge?
- What is hypnotism?
- What is a water otter?
- Have you heard the story about the slippery eel?
- What would happen if pigs could fly?
- Who is always being let down by his mates?
- What does the Indian ghost live in?
- What are a ghoul´s best friend?
- What does a ghost take for a bad cold?
- What do you think of Dracula films?
- Where does Dracula always stay when he´s in New York?
- What show do ghost like to go to?
- How do ghost get through locked doors?
- What's gray and wears a crown?
- What's the most famous fish?
- What do you get if you cross a sardina with a saber?
- What's 10 yards long, lives in Scotland, and never wins anything?
- What's yellow and never talks to anyone?
- What fish do shoemakers use every day?
- What do horseflies do when you invite them to dinner?
- What kind of crackers are bad for parrots?
- What kind of plant hates to hate company?
- What bread has the worst attitude?
- What fairy tale monsters lost her sheep?
- What do you call an ordinary aircraft?
- what do you do when you hit a seashell with a stick?
- How do we know that spiders own computers?
- What did Captain Hook do when he lost his hand?
- How do rubber bands warm up?
- Why did the police go to the baseball stadium?
- What do petunias wear when they exercise?
- How does Mother Earth fish?
- Why was Cinderella so bad at basketball?
- How did the clock feel when no one wound it up?
- How did the dentist fix the dragon´s teeth?
- Where should you pay your car repair bill?
- What´s a spider´s favorite picnic food?
- What did the conductor say to the drummer?
- What do whales use to hold their tails up?
- What would you get worms ruled the earth?
- Why don´t bumblebees go shopping?
- What happened to the origami shop thta used to be on this block?
- Why don´t ants smell?
- What kind of cars do ponies drive?
- What happebed when the pelican flew over the whale?
- How did the farmer mend his jeans?
- What do you say to a slow walnut?
- What would you call a small wound?
- How is a movie like a broken leg?
- What do you call a dad who sings and dances?
- What do waiters ask when playing tennis?
- Why did the cookie go to the doctor?
- What is a drill sergeant?
- What is a tree´s favorite drink?
- What do you call an underground home for a donkey?
- How so you transform what you put food on into tardinnes?
- What is a second scoop of ice cream called?
- What do you call flowers that use the Internet?
- How do kangaroos add up their purchases?
- Why can´t Dracula play baseball?
- why do skeletons play piano?
- What´s gray, weighs 4 tons, and flies?
- What´s short, scared of wolves, and swears a iot?
- What has tentacles and dances on television?
- What do you get if you cross a river with a boat?
- What´s black and white, black and white, black and white?
- Did they catch the burglar who stole the piano?
- What do you do when you hit a seashell with a stick?
- Why didn´t the horse draw the cart?
- What do planets like to read?
- Why did the long distance runner go to the veterinarian?
- Why did the cranberry turn red?
- What do baseball players on third base like to sing?
- What is a tree´s favorite drink?
- What does an octoopus wear?
- Which army officer is a pest?
- What big cat lives in the backyard?
- What peels and hips but doesn´t crack?
- What did Adam never see or possess, yet left two ffor each of his childrem?
- Why did the elephant wear green sneakers?
- Why did the lobster blush?
- What did the carpet say to the floor?
- Doctor, doctor! I feel like car!
- Why are pizza makers so wealthy?
- Why was the pajama store closed?
- what do you get if you cross a telephone and a shirt?
- What is fat. green goes ¨Oink, oink¨?
- What´s an elephant in a fridge called?
- What´s the best way to make trouser last?
- What do pianists use to eat their steak?
- What does an astronaut eat her spaghetti from?
- Where do worms get their mail?
- What should you do for a starving cannibal?
- What is always behind time?
- What is hypnotism?
- Where do pigs like to sit?
- What do you call two recently married dandelions?
- What do you call a window in a palace?
- Where do horses stay in a hotel?
- What did the cow girl say to the boy cow?
- Where does smart butter go?
- How are the dogcatchers paid?
- What would you get if you crossed a white bear with a rabbit?
- What did you call a cranberry that eats another cranberry?
- What game do horses play?
- What do you call a broken phonograph record?
- What gives milk and has to wheels?
- What do you call a dumb ape?
- What do they put on a criminal pig?
- If a athlete gets athlete's foot, what does a scuba diver get?
- What do mangos like to read?
- Why aren't robots ever afraid?
- How do dentists fix dragon teeth?
- What is the most famous skunk statue in Egypt?
- What do skeletons say before eating?
- What would you get if you crossed a termite with a praying mantis?
- What do you call a banana that's been stepped on?
- What's a centipede?
- What's a chimp's favorite ice cream?
- What happens when a witch breaks the sound barrier?
- What do canaries say on Halloween?
- What does a troll call his apartment?
- What do you get if you cross a laptop with a skunk?
- What do you get if you cross a swordfish with a bumblebee?
- What's the difference between a small, nectar-eating bird and a bunch of cows standing around doing nothing?
- What did the teddy bear say when offered dessert?
- Why don't bumblebees go shopping?
- Why couldn't the piano go home after the concert?
- What did the mother piano say to the baby grand?
- What do you get when you cross a BMW with a piano?
- Why was the pianist smacking her head on the keys?
- Why do baseball players make good pianists?
- What insect is musical?
- How do frogs and rabbits make beer?
- What is long, has a red hat and lies in a box?
- Where do they go dancing in California?
- What did the invisible man says to his girlfriend?
- What did the picture say to the wall?
- Who was the first underwater spy?
- What wobbles when it flies?
- What is gray and has four legs and a trunk?
- Why are ghost cowards?
- Why do lightning bugs get A's in school?
- What do skeletons play in a band?
- How do you catch a fairy?
- What do baby ghosts turn on before they go to bed?
- Why does Batman search for worms?
- Why did tiny Tim throw the butter out of the window?
- What is striped and goes 'round and 'round?
- How big are centipedes?
- Where do strawberries play their saxophones?
- What famous detective liked to take bubble baths?
- What do ducks like on television?
- Do you know the joke about the bed?
- What goes in pink and comes out blue?
- If cakes are 66 cents each, how much are upside-down cakes?
- What did the beach say when the tide came in?
- Why did the whale cross the ocean?
- Why is the letter D like a sailor?
- When does a farm go round and round?
- What did the digital watch say to its mother?
- What did the frog say to the tailor who couldn't find the scissors?
- What's the worm army called?
- What's red, squishy, and says "excuse me"?
- What ha feathers and carries water?
- What's cowardly, thin, and full of noodles?
- What's plastic, runs on batteries, and counts cattle?
- What's an Eskismo cow called?
- What's brown, crazy and lives in South America?
- What sits in a stroller and wobbles?
- What's the most famous fish?
- What's a spider thathas just got married?
- What do mice do all day?
- What's a frog's favorite drink?
- What's a sleeping prehistoric mosnter called?
- What's yellow, has twenty-four legs, and sings?
- What color is a shout?
- What's the easiest way to make a bandstand?
- What's the punishment for bigamy?
- What do you get if you cross a cat with a canary?
- What's green and jumps up and down?
- What's the most popular gardening magazine in the world?
- What's a computer's favorite food?
- What's Count Dracula's New York house called?
- What do you get if you cross a cow with an octopus?
- What do you get if you cross a cat with an ambulance man?
- What do you get if you cross a chicken with gunpowder?
- What do you get if you cross a chicken with a kangaroo?
- What's the best day to cook bacon and eggs?
- What goes "ABC... slurp... DFE... slurp"?
- What's an English wasp's favorite TV station?
- What did the bees go on strike for?
- What's a cat's favorite newspaper?
- What do you get if you cross a cw with a camel?
- What's yellow and goes "kcauq, kcauq"?
- How do you get rid of a boomerang?
- How do you get six elephants in a matchbox?
- How does an angel greet another?
- How do you make an elephant stew?
- Why does a man permit himself to be hen-pecked?
- What's best for a kangaroo with appendicitis?
- What makes a giraffe so arrogant?
- What's the best for a sick horse?
- What do frogs wear in summer?
- What's a cat that has just swallowed a duck?
- How do pigs say goodbye?
- How do you make a car smile?
- What's spotted and untrustworthy?
- What do you get if you cross an elephant with a mouse?
- Why did the silly kid put an alarm clock in his shoe?
- Why was the Easter Bunny so upset?
- Why was he robin first in line at the beauty parlor?
- How do you keep a monkey in suspense?
- How do you fix a tomato?
- What's an vampire's favorite animal?
- What's a vampire bath?
- What's a vampire's favorite fruit?
- What's Dracula's car called?
- What's got feathers, wings and fangs?
- What do you get if you cross Dracula with snow?
- What's Count Dracula's favorite coffee?
- What's small, brown, and carries a suitcase?
- What's a fisherman paid?
- What has six legs, four eyes, and a tail?
- What's the hottest show on television?
- How do you stop an elephant from chasing you?
- How do you find your dog if he's lost in the woods?
- How does an angel greet another?
- How do you prevent water from getting into your house?
- What's Batman doing in the tree?
- What's a snowflakes' dance called?
- What's smaall, blue, and eat cakes?
- What was Noah's profession?
- What's an army?
- What did Adam first plant in the Garden of Eden?
- What is the strongest day in the week?
- Why did the banana go out with the prune?
- Why did Ken keep his trumpet in the fridge?
- What do porcupines say when they're kissing?
- What's a two-week-old, black and white Russian dog called?
- What did one wall say to the other wall?
- What is long, has a red hat and lies in a box?
- What is the most common illness in birds?
- Who was the first underwater spy?
- What wobbles when it flies?
- What would happen if pigs could fly?
- Have you heard the story about the skyscraper?
- Who is always being let down by his mates?
- What has six legs, four ears, and a tail?
- What can you touch, see, and make but can't hold?
- Why is the letter D like a sailor?
- How does a quiet Hawaiian laugh?
- What is a big frog's favorite game?
- What kind of eyeglasses so spies wear?
- What do you getwhen you tear a scarf in two?
- What did the mirror say to the dresser?
- Why did the turtle cross the road?
- What caused to riot in the post office?
- What would you get if you crossed an octopus and a mink?
- What happens when you ask an oyster a personal question?
- What kind of oven does the ocean use to cook its food?
- Why don't cows ever have any money?
- What did the tree say to the woodchopper?
- How do you begin a book about ducks?
- What do you call a grandmother who designs programs?
- Why did the computer sneeze?
- Where do snowmen put their websites?
- Why do beavers spend sso much time on the internet?
- Where do strawberries play their saxophones?
- What do you get when a waiter trips?
- Why do lightning bugs get A's in school?
- Who did Frankestein take to the prom?
- Why doesn't Dracula like garlic?
- How do you transform extreme fear into a mistake?
- What do you call a banana split that falls to the ground?
- What kind of toes do you find underground?
- How do you transform extreme fear into a mistake?
- What do you get if you cross a boulder and a biscuit?
- What do you call a banana split that falls to the ground?
- What kind of toes do you find underground?
- What games do baby cows lilke best?
- What dogs are the best at telling time?
- Do vampires make mistakes?
- What do you call pigs that want everything?
- What kind of coffe does a vampire drink?
- Where do mummies go for pizza?
- Where do cats go to dance?
- What metal can't feel anything?
- What kind of jokes do vegetable like?
- What do you call a rotten essay?
- How do pandas ride bikes safely?
- What do kangaroos ask for at motels?
- Where the spiders get their music?
- Why did the farmer plow his field with a steam-roller?
- What do you get when you spill soda in a cornfield?
- What should ypu do with rude pepperoni?
- Where do bad vegetables go?
- What dressing does Popeye put on his salad?
- What card game do construction workers play?
- What game do mice like to play?
- What's a tornado's favorite game?
- Where do strawberries play their saxophones?
- Why do lightning bugs get A's in school?
- What does a frog say when it sees something terrific?
- What is a sleppy king's favorite Christmas carol?
- What is the reasonable amount of money to pay for an airplane ticket?
- What happens when you surf the Internet?
- What do you call the location of your eye?
- What did the hip-hop singer want for his birthday?
- When is the best time fo year to find frogs?
- Do vampires make mistakes?
- What happened when the bear scratchedits back on the tree?
- What probably happend if your car wont' stop?
- What do you call a funeral for a small fruit?
- What do you get if you cross a bear with a rooster?
- What do you get if you cross a shark and a hyena?
- What do you get if you crossa hummingbird and a turkey?
- What kind of 8 teaches school?
- Why did everyone go hear the little hen sing?
- What would you get if you crossed a cactus with a porcupine?
- What do you call sea gulls that live by the bay?
- How can you tell if an elephant is in your cereal box?
- What can of killer uses a spoon?
- Why can't bicycles go as fast as cars?
- What do you call a ghost and a zombie that go out on a date?
- What dogs are the best at telling time?
- What's the opposite of a cool cat?
- Why did the poodle go to bed early?
- When is the best time to find frogs?
- What kind of bull can you always trust?
- What kind of bull is the cutest?
- Why did the teacher give the little hen a bad grade?
- What is a walkway on an island?
- What is a walkway on an island?
- In what months is it okay to tell a lie?
- What's the coldest tropical island?
- Wher does a hen keep her wallet?
- What does a hen wear in prison?
- How do you transform an aircraft into a strategy?
- What do you get when you tighten the ropes on tents too much?
- What's the opposite of a cool cat?
- Why do bears get so many splinters?
- How do cows communicate?
- Which state is like a horse's hair?
- What did the old monster say to the young monster?
- What month do Brazilian dancers like best?
- What month always asks permission?
- What are unhappy cranberries called?
- What do you call a croissant on roller skates?
- What do you call a bird in winter?
- What two letters describe the winter?
- Why do bears have fur?
- Where do Easter bunnies dance?
- What's the best way to paint the ocean?
- Why did the angry sailor walk strangely?
- What kind of bull is hard to see?
- What's purple and white, lives in the sea, and has big teeth?
- Which zombie won the weird zombie race?
- What animal is big, grey, and wears glass slippers?
- What do teenage monsters say when they like something?
- What do you call a smashed purple vegetable?
- What kind of deer is the scariest?
- What kind of music do rabbits like best?
- Where do pigs park their cars?
- What did the mother bee say to the bad baby bee?
- What kind of monster keeps getting lost?
- What's the difference between a rude person and an angry flags?
- What airplane flies backwards?
- Why did the lady mouse want to move?
- What do rodents drink in the summer?
- What do whales chew?
- How can you tell when a vegetable is angry?
- Why do gorillas have big nostrils?
- What kind of lions are the best swimmers?
- Who do fish see when they don't feel well?
- What kind of birds do knights like best?
- What do knights do when they get scared?
- What does a button do?
- What fish smells the worst?
- What monsters are afraid of small places?
- What do little boy monsters become when they grow up?
- What is an electric bulb that doesn't weigh very much?
- What do you call a nice woodland animals?
- What happens to shellfish that work out in a gym for long periods of time?
- What's the difference between a clown and someone who loves dollar bills?
- What do you get if you cross a cow with a duck?
- What's the worst thing about being an octopus?
- How do snakes sign their letters?
- What animal lives in a gym?
- What do spiders eat with their hamburgers?
- Where do owls stay when they take a trip?
- What did the mother rope say to the baby rope?
- What did the cloud have under its raincoat?
- What did they call Old Macdonald when he joined the army?
- What dog bakes cake?
- Why do golfers like Fruit Loops?
- Why do hockey players skate on ice?
- On what day do spiders have a good meal?
- Did you hear about the tire that had a nervous breakdown?
- How do robins stay in shape?
- What gives milk and has to wheels?
- Why was Snow White a good judge?
- What kind of parties do prisioners like?
- What streches and steals things?
- Why don't fish watch TV?
- What jewerly do vegetables wear?
- How did the peach feel after it was eaten?
- What do planets like to read?
- What's a caterpillar worst enemy?
- What did one cow say to the other cow who was in her way?
- Why was the invisible man depressed?
- What letters do ghost like to send?
- What should you do if you're stuck on the Web?
- What should you do if you're stuck on the Web?
- What do birds need when they're sick?
- Where do dirty socks go when they get sick?
- Where do angels swing and slide?
- What game do falcons play on ice?
- What's a baby's favorite ride?
- Why did the rabbit buy a house?
- How do you welcome a ghost into your house?
- Why do frogs have such an easy life?
- Why are potatoes good detectives?
- Where do bad vegetables volunteer?
- What do you get when a police officer suprises a skunk?
- What do mice use for bad breath?
- Why did the silly student eat his homework?
- What's the best thing to take to the desert?
- How do carpenters greet each other?
- What did the motorcyclists ask for at the motel?
- What does Farmer Darth Vader cultivate?
- When is it bad luck to have a black cat following you?
- What do cats say when they want to go out-doors?
- Where do dogs and cats buy their furniture?
- What kind of dogs do vampires own?
- What happend when the cat ate a ball of yarn?
- What kind of car does Mickey Mouse drive?
- What's a ladybug's favorite singing group?
- What do scientists do after they discover a new gene?
- What do you call a chicken farmer?
- What do you call a princess with a tidy house?
- Where do ghost mail their letter?
- What did the hip-hop singer want for his birthday?
- What does an egg do when another egg bothers it?
- What kind of market does a dog hate?
- Who brings dogs their presents at Christmas?
- Why did the cookie go to the doctor?
- What does a rabbit have when it ges a good job offer?
- What illnes can you catch from a martial arts expert?
- What do you call cars in the fall?
- Why did King Kong cross the road?
- What happened when the silkworms had a race?
- How do bees get to school?
- What's a caterpillar?
- What's the difference between Asian eating utensils and a fence around a chicken coop?
- What do you get if you cross a lion and a drummer?
- Why don't oysters share their toys?
- What do you get if you cross an electric eel and a light bulb?
- What do you get if you cross an owl with a fish?
- What kind of Mexican food do hens like?
- Why didn't the little skeleton do his homework?
- What do you do when you listen at this place?
- How do oysters communicate?
- What is a fish's favorite country?
- Where do knights go to dance?
- What holidays do monsters like best?
- What do you call a very strange marketplace?
- What do you get if you cross a python and an orange?
- How do you say goodbye to your spaghetti?
- What has two arms, two legs, and a horn?
- What kind of game can you play with nine clocks and your feet?
- What smells but has no smell?
- Why did the little gnome hate school?
- How do you transform an aircraft into a strategy?
- Who is the worst entertainer in the Himalayan mountains?
- What is the weirdest vegetable?
- What's a monster's favorite month?
- What does a person from Thailand wear around his neck?
- What do you get if you cross a hummingbird with a T-Rex?
- What do you get if you cross a squirrel with a monkey?
- What do you get if you cross a chameleon and a camel?
- What's the speed limit in Egypt?
- What's the speed limit in Egypt?
- What's a cannibal's favorite game?
- What do you get if you cross a giraffe with a dog?
- What's green and for hire?
- What's white, runs, and lies under the bed with its tongue hanging out?
- What's smashing and comes between morning and afternoon?
- What game do horses like?
- What do you do with a sick parakeet?
- What's round and bad-tempered?
- Why did the farmer drive over his potatoe field with a steam-roller?
- What is red, has bumps and a horse, and lives on the prairie?
- What do mermaids eat for breakfast?
- Why would a compliment from a chicken be an insult?
- Why do people laugh up their sleeves?
- How do you prevent water from getting into your house?
- How did the computer criminal get out of jail?
- How do vegetables trace their ancestry?
- Why is a horse like a lollipop?
- Why is the letter K like a pig's tail?
- Why did the robber take a shower before holding up the bank?
- What wobbles when it flies?
- What do you get if you cross a mink and a kangaroo?
- What would you do with a sick wasp?
- What orders does everybody like to receive?
- What is always behind time?
- When is a windows like a star?
- Why do birds in a nest always agree?
- What do you call a baby whale?
- What did the strawberry say to the second strawberry?
- Why is the sand wet?
- Do you know the joke about the dirty window?
- Why did the owl make everyone laugh?
- Why did the Red Indian put a bucket over his head?
- What goes in black and comes out white?
- What can't you do if you put 250 melons in the fridge?
- What did the big candle say to the little candle?
- What did the tie say to the hat?
- What did the spider say to the beetle?
- What is the best thing to take into the desert?
- Do you know how to make a bandstand?
- How do you make a cigarrette lighter?
- What's mad and goes to the moon?
- Why does a cow go over a hill?
- Why did the worm oversleep?
- Why are football players cool?
- Why did the ram fall over the cliff?
- Why did the dog go to court?
- Why did the antelope run?
- Did you hear about the skunk who had no nose?
- Did you ever hear the story of the new roof?
- Why is a cat like a transcontinental highway?
- Why did the biscuit cry?
- What do you call a cat who swallowed a duck?
- How do you keep a monkey in suspense?
- What did the rock pool say to another rock pool?
- Why did the dieter bring scissors to the dinner table?
- Why are cards like wolves?
- Why did the crow sit on the telephone line?
- Why is a tent like a baseball?
- What is the best way to communicate with a fish?
- Why do lions eat raw meat?
- What has four legs and one foot?
- What was Noah's profession?
- What do you get when you eat foam?
- Who invented gunpowder?
- When does an astronaut have his midday meal?
- How did the exhausted sparrow land safely?
- Why did the judge sentence the comedian to five years in jail?
- Why did the boy hold his report card over his head?
- Why are tomatoes the slowest fruit?
- Why would men avoid the letter A?
- Why did the woman spray insect repellent on her computer?
- Why did the crazy man eat a light bulb?
- Why was the silly person able to buy ice at half price?
- Why do women not become bald as soon as men?
- Why shouldn't you tell jokes when you're ice-skating?
- Why is the sea measured in knots?
- Why did the orange stop in the middle of the road?
- Why is it so hard to make frogs cry?
- Why does your sense of touch suffer when you are ill?
- Why don't silly people call 911 in an emergency?
- Why was the baseball player arrested in the middle of the game?
- Why do Irish peasants wear capes?
- Why did the golfer wear an extra pair of trousers?
- Why did the sea bird rob the jewerly store?
- Why are dolphins cleverer than humans?
- Is it dangerous to swim on a full stomach?
- Why does Santa always climb down chimneys?
- Why is twice ten the same as twice eleven?
- Why did the cracker cry?
- Why do we go to bed?
- Wo drives all his costumers away?
- Have you heard the story of the church bell?
- What can you give someone and still keep?
- When is a door not a door?
- What is the longest night of the year?
- Why should dieters avoid the letter C?
- What did one hair say to the other hair?
- When is it good manners to spit in a man's face?
- Why did the silly kid put his watch on the scale?
- What's the most popular gardening magazine?
- How can you touch the floor without standing on your feet or hands?
- What were Alexander Graham Bell's first words?
- What could cause a lot of trouble if it stopped smoking?
- What size are very large eggs?
- What do you get if a cat swallows a ball of wool?
- What did the german policeman say to his chest?
- Why did the burglar take a shower?
- Who is the smallest sailor in the world?
- What is it you can put in your right hand but not in your left?
- What's the noisiest of all games?
- What does a match do when it loses its temper?
- What does a ball do when it stops rolling?
- What happened to the plastic surgeon when he stood by the fire?
- Where does satifaction come from?
- What goes in pink and comes out blue?
- When is the best time to go to bed?
- Where will you always finds diamonds?
- What's the difference between maximum and minimum?
- What do you get if you cross a bear and a skunk?
- Why doesn't a frog jump when it's sad?
- Where do geologists go for entertainment?
- What did the boy snake say to the girl snake?
- What did Adam say on the day before Christmas?
- When is a house not on land nor on water?
- When is a Chinese restaurant successful?
- What do jelly babies wear on their feet?
- Where do they go dancing in California?
- What did the invisible man say to his girlfriend?
- What did the magnet say to the second magnet?
- How would you avoid starvation on a desert island?
- What´s seven feet high, green and sits in the corner?
- What room has no walls, floor, ceiling, or windows?
- Why the schoolboy throw a clock out of the window?
- What did the ceiling say to the four walls?
- What shampoo do mountains use?
- What kind of ball is fun to play with but doesn't bounce?
- Why was the belt arrested?
- What is black and white and hides in caves?
- What two garden vegetables fight crime?
- What kind of television program do you see in the morning?
- What's the difference between the law and an ice cube?
- What's the most noble creature of the sea?
- What mouse was ruler of the Romans?
- Why did the lobster blush?
- What do you call a foreign body on a griddle?
- What is gray and blue and very big?
- What did one raindrop say to the other?
- How do elephants speak to each other?
- Is it hard to spot a leopard?
- What kind of suit does a duck wear?
- Did you hear the joke about the express train?
- How do retired sailors greet each other?
- Why did the surgeon wear a tuxedo in the operation room?
- What is NBC?
- What word has three double letters in a row?
- What is a mouse's favorite game?
- Why did Snoopy quit the comic strip?
- What can you swallow that can also swallow you?
- What geometric figure do sailors fear?
- Who was the first underwater spy?
- What was the police dog's telephone number?
- What do ghosts like to ride on at the fair?
- What do you get if you cross a kangaroo and a elephant?
- What's the best cure for sleepwalking?"
- What did the big chimney say to the little chimney?
- What did the carpet say to the floor?
- What is the most common illnes in birds?
- Where do gnomes live?
- What dog has no tail?
- Where do cows go on vacations?
- What would happen if pigs could fly?
- What's the difference between an Indian elephant and an African elephant?
- What's the difference between a jeweler and a jailer?
- What do you get if you cross a cat and a lemon?
- Why will the world never end?
- What job did the lady ghost have on an airplane?
- What does a doctor tell you if you've swallowed a spoon?
- What did one germ say to the other germ?
- What's the difference between an Indian elephant and an African elephant?
- What has 22 legs and goes crunch, crunch, crunch?
- What does a banana do when it sees a gorilla?
- What is green and goes slam, slam, slam, slam?
- What do you get if you cross a rhinoceros and a goose?
- What is the cheapest way to buy holes?
- Where can you buy a ruler that is 3 feet long?
- What do you say to King Kong when he gets married?
- What's the best way to get rid of a demon?
- What does an up-to-date witch fly?
- What is the first thing little vampires learn in school?
- What is green, small, and in the corner of a room?
- Who gets congratulated when they are down and out?
- Why did the match box?
- When do boxers start wearing gloves?
- What's faster than a speed bullet, more powerful than locomotive, and green?
- What kind of teeth can you buy for a dollar?
- What is the best thing for nail biting?
- What is raised during the rainy season in Brazil?
- What are the odds of something happening at 12:50?
- Why is doing nothing so tiring?
- How many feet are in the world?
- If a box is filled with water, what can you add to make it weight less?
- What kind of match won't light fires?
- What do you call a six-foot-tall basketball player?
- What color is a happy cat?
- What kind of shoes do frogs like?
- What do you need to spot an iceberg 20 miles away?
- How does a king open a door?
- What month is worst for soldiers?
- What kind of chair does a geologist like to relax on?
- What does the Invisible Woman drink at snacktime?
- What do frogs drink at snacktime?
- What is the best-looking geometric figure?
- If George Washington were alive today, what would he be most famous for?
- Where is Timbuktu?
- Why were the sardines out of work?
- What do whales like to chew?
- How many relatives went to the picnic?
- Why do elephants have short tails?
- What do you get when you cross a penguin and an alligator?
- How does a penguin make pancakes?
- Who's the penguin's favorite aunt?
- Where do penguins go to dance?
- How do Penguins drink their cola?
- Where do penguins go swimming?
- Why do seals swim in salt water?
- What do you get if you cross a polar bear and a seal?
- What's the difference between an iceberg and a clothes brush?
- What do you call a big mean polar bear?
- Why did the otter cross the road?
- Which is lighter, the Sun or the Earth?
- What is quicker than a fish?
- When is it dangerous to play cards?
- What dog do you find in the U.N.?
- What invention allows people to walk through walls?
- What goes "Ho, ho, ho, swoosh, ho, ho, ho, swoosh"?
- Why was Adam's first day so long?
- What is an electrician's favorite ice cream?
- What punctuation mark is used in writing dance music?
- Who is is safe when a man-eating lion is loose?
- What do frogs drink at snack-time?
- When is it impossible to give someone the time of day?
- What do you get if you cross a skunk and a raccoon?
- How can you tell which end of a worm is its head?
- How do you avoid being driven crazy?
- What bird is useful in boxing matches?
- What do you give an elk with indigestion?
- What does an elf do when it gets home from school?
- What is big and yellow and comes in the morning to brighten Mother's day?
- What do you say to a hitch-hiking frog?
- What is green and thin and jumps every few seconds?
- What do you get if you crossed a noisy frog and a shaggy dog?
- What do you get if you cross a skunk and a gorilla?
- What language do chimpanzees speak?
- How mad can a kangaroo get?
- What do you get if you cross a hyena and a parrot?
- What has antlers and eats cheese?
- What does Tarzan sing at Christmas time?
- When the baby cries at night, who gets up?
- How do you send a message to a VIking?
- What is green and red all over?
- Where do nuts gather?
- How do you catch an electric eel?
- Where is the ocean deepest?
- What kind of person steals soap?
- Why did the burglar take a bath before breaking out of jail?
- What always speaks the truth but doesn't say a word?
- What pierces your ears without leaving a hole?
- What is the first safety rule for witches?
- What do you get when you cross a ghost and an elephant?
- What clothing does a house wear?
- What is the oldest fruit?
- What do rich turtles wear?
- What is beautiful, gray, and wears glass slippers?
- What is it like to have eight arms?
- What kind of bars can't keep prisoners in jail?
- Why are four-legged animals such poor dancers?
- Why shouldn't you cry over spilled milk?
- What do you get if you cross a germ and a comedian?
- What did the stamp say when it fell in love with the envelope?
- What do you get when you cross a wolf and a roster?
- Did you hear the joke about the sun?
- What is the correct way to file and axe?
- What snacks do robots serve at parties?
- What do termites eat for breakfast?
- What did Mary have for dinner?
- What do sweet potatoes do when they play together?
- Where do people in India go for sandwiches?
- What is good on a roll but bad on the road?
- What is black and white and blue all over?
- What do you get if you cross a cow and an octopus?
- What kind of geese are found in portugal?
- What kind of tea do a king and queen drink?
- Where do blue Easter eggs come from?
- What is green, long, and grouchy?
- Where do fortune tellers dance?
- What part of your body has the most rhythm?
- Where does a dog go when he loses his tail?
- What is an octopus?
- What has four legs and can't walk?
- What is a net?
- What is the biggest moth of all?
- Can February March?
- Why did the banana go out with the prune?
- Why do bananas have to use suntan lotion?
- How do you make a hot-dog stand?
- What is a hen's favorite vegetable?
- What do you get when you cross a stream and a brook?
- What goes zzub-zzub?
- Why did the lion spit out the clown?
- Why did the tomato turn red?
- What smells but doesn't have a nose?
- Who can jump higher than a mountain?
- Did the water laugh when the ice told the joke?
- What starts with E and ends with E and has only one letter in it?
- What animal can never open a door?
- What did the digital clock say to its mother?
- Which animal is always smiling?
- What do you get when you jump in the Red Sea?
- What do you say when you meet a two-headed dinosaur?
- Why do bees buzz?
- What do you get when an elephant skydives?
- How do you help a hungry tiger?
- What are the two things you can't have for breakfast?
- What room can't a skeleton go in?
- What is green, small, and goes up and down?
- Why do babies go to sleep when they hear a lullaby?
- What do you call it when an orange hits a banana?
- What did the bee say to the flower?
- What should you do to a blue elephant?
- How do you stop a charging elephant?
- What is black and white and pink all over?
- What makes more noise than a dinosaur?
- Why shouldn't you take a bear to the zoo?
- What do you call a cat that is frozen?
- What did the cat say to the elephant?
- What do moths study in school?
- What can make an octopus laugh?
- What is large and gray and goes around and around in circles?
- What do you get if you add 2357 and 5190 and then subtract 555 and divide the answer by 45?
- What is a volcano?
- What goes down but never goes up?
- Why did the elephant painted its toes green?
- Why was six afraid of seven?
- Where do fish come from?
- What did the traffic light say to the driver?
- Why is it hard for a ghost to tell a lie?
- What is the one word a dog can say?
- Which fish go to heaven when they die?
- What does a Triceratops sit on?
- Why didn't the banana snore?
- What is hairy and coughs?
- Why didn't the skeleton go to the party?
- What has antlers and sucks blood?
- Who is never hungry at Christmas?
- What do you get if you cross a parrot with a centipede?
- What do you call a very rude bird?
- Why does Dracula have no friends?
- What does a magician like to keep up his sleeve?
- When does a dog go "moo"?
- What do you get if you cross a dog and a cheetah?
- What do you call a homeless snail?
- How many books can you put in an empty backpack?
- What has four wheels and flies?
- Why do hummingbirds hum?
- What do you get when you cross a cheetah & a hamburger?
- What is red and goes up and down?
- What do you call a gigantic polar bear?
- What did the sea say to the iceberg?
- What do you give a pig with a rash?
- Why did the elephant stand on the marshmallow?
- Why do birds fly south?
- What do you call a snowman with a suntan?
- What's the difference between a TV and a newspaper?
- What do prisoners use to call each other?
- What do you get when you cross a snowman with a vampire?
- What do sea monsters eat?
- Why are goldfish red?
- What kind of hair do oceans have?
- What is the most slippery country in the world?
- Why does a flamingo lift up one leg?
- What has forty feet and sings?
- What's in the middle of a jellyfish?
- What subject is a witch good at in school?
- What's white on the outside, green on the inside and comes with relish and onions?
- What's green, has 4 legs, and is dangerous?
- What has two legs and flies?
- Why do fireman wear red suspendors?
- What do you call a fish with no eyes?
- What are the best things to put in a fruit pie?
- What lives under the sea and carries 64 people?
- Who earns a living by driving their customers away?
- What sound do porcupines make when they kiss?
- What word is always pronounced wrong?
- What has antlers and sucks blood?
- How do the fish get to school?
- What is the one word a dog can say?
- Why do you go to bed?
- What do bees chew?
- What's red, yellow and green and has a wing span of 15 yards?
- Why are tall people lazier than short people?
- Why don't elephants ride bicycles?
- Where would you find a prehistoric cow?
- What's yellow on the inside and green on the outside?
- What's black when clean and white when dirty?
- What do you call a sleeping bull?
- What is the biggest ant of all?
- Who wears the biggest hat in the world?
- What is the largest mouse in the world?
- What swings through trees and is very dangerous?
- What do you call a mad spaceman?
- What travels 100 miles per hour underground?
- How do you milk a mouse?
- Why do bees hum?
- What animals need oiling?
- How do you stop a dog from barking in the back seat of a car?
- What driver can never be arrested for speeding?
- When is it bad luck to cross the path black cat?
- What is hairy and coughs?
- Why do bears wear fur coats?
- What goes black and white and black and white and black and white?
- What do you get if you cross a cat and an octagon?
- How do you stop an elephant from passing through the eye of a needle?
- What dog has no tail?
- What's white and goes up?
- What is brown, has four feet, a hump, and is found in Antarctica?
- Why do bulls have horns?
- How do you stop a rooster crowing on Sunday?
- Why do birds fly south in the winter?
- What's black and white and red all over?
- Why did the orange stop?
- What is black and white and goes up and down?
- What has four legs, a tail, whiskers, and flies?
- Why do witches fly about on broomsticks?
- What has a horn and gives milk?
- What is a common illness in China?
- How does an octopus go into battle?
- What is black and white and has sixteen wheels?
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