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::stage Adult:: An adult penguin can reproduce only when they are between 3 and 8 years old, but normally penguins start breeding at the age of five. Smaller penguin species tend to reach sexual maturity earlier than the larger penguin species. Larger penguin species like King Penguin can breed twice in three years as they have 16 months of breeding cycle, whereas a little penguin can breed anytime throughout the year. All of them come on bare ground to lay eggs, while the Emperor penguins lay eggs on ice. In the month of March, the penguins travel 90-100 km inland in search of the 'perfect site' for breeding. It is a very risky journey, because those who are left behind, fall prey to predators or may even die of starvation. When the pengunis have finalized a site, in April they start mating. The penguins find their soulmates through singing and it is up to the males to attract females, and the females choose their partners accordingly. Penguins are monogamous creatures as they live with the same partner throughout their life. ::stage Egg:: A few weeks after mating, the female penguin lays 1 or 2 eggs. After laying eggs the females transfer the eggs to their male partners. In June-July, the males place the egg on their feet and incubate it. This transfer is the most important phase because, if the eggs break they can mate only in the next year, but usually during this transfer almost 20% of eggs break. The females search for food while the males incubate the eggs and wait for the partner to return. And once the female penguin returns, the penguins exchange their roles; the female incubates the egg while the male goes for food hunting. This is the most unique feature in the penguin's life cycle. In no other species of animals or birds are the fathers known to take care of their little ones. The penguin fathers are very loving, they fast for almost two months till their female partners return. During cold winds they form a close circle, to save heat for their offspring. ::stage Chick:: The eggs hatch sometime near August. It takes three days to hatch the eggs and as soon as the juvenile (baby penguin) comes out of its egg it starts calling, so that the parents learn to recognize the voice. The chicks are either brown or black in color and they have feathers that are not waterproof, so the juvenile penguin stays on land until it gets mature. During this time (in the month of September) the females return and feed the chicks by regurgitating while the males go for feeding. The male and female take turns to feed the chicks. This is repeated almost six times. It takes seven weeks to thirteen months for the chick to develop and get the waterproof feathers. When the chick is strong enough, both the parents go together for feeding. The adult penguin is no more dependent on its parents and hunts for food on its own. Finally in the month of December the families leave for the sea. One advantage of this cycle is, by the time the chicks are ready to swim, it is summer and the sea is abundant with food. In the next year, the same cycle is repeated; the adults start their journey, while the young ones stay on the shore. | In the adult stage,it has feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Adult:: An adult penguin can reproduce only when they are between 3 and 8 years old, but normally penguins start breeding at the age of five. Smaller penguin species tend to reach sexual maturity earlier than the larger penguin species. Larger penguin species like King Penguin can breed twice in three years as they have 16 months of breeding cycle, whereas a little penguin can breed anytime throughout the year. All of them come on bare ground to lay eggs, while the Emperor penguins lay eggs on ice. In the month of March, the penguins travel 90-100 km inland in search of the 'perfect site' for breeding. It is a very risky journey, because those who are left behind, fall prey to predators or may even die of starvation. When the pengunis have finalized a site, in April they start mating. The penguins find their soulmates through singing and it is up to the males to attract females, and the females choose their partners accordingly. Penguins are monogamous creatures as they live with the same partner throughout their life. ::stage Egg:: A few weeks after mating, the female penguin lays 1 or 2 eggs. After laying eggs the females transfer the eggs to their male partners. In June-July, the males place the egg on their feet and incubate it. This transfer is the most important phase because, if the eggs break they can mate only in the next year, but usually during this transfer almost 20% of eggs break. The females search for food while the males incubate the eggs and wait for the partner to return. And once the female penguin returns, the penguins exchange their roles; the female incubates the egg while the male goes for food hunting. This is the most unique feature in the penguin's life cycle. In no other species of animals or birds are the fathers known to take care of their little ones. The penguin fathers are very loving, they fast for almost two months till their female partners return. During cold winds they form a close circle, to save heat for their offspring. ::stage Chick:: The eggs hatch sometime near August. It takes three days to hatch the eggs and as soon as the juvenile (baby penguin) comes out of its egg it starts calling, so that the parents learn to recognize the voice. The chicks are either brown or black in color and they have feathers that are not waterproof, so the juvenile penguin stays on land until it gets mature. During this time (in the month of September) the females return and feed the chicks by regurgitating while the males go for feeding. The male and female take turns to feed the chicks. This is repeated almost six times. It takes seven weeks to thirteen months for the chick to develop and get the waterproof feathers. When the chick is strong enough, both the parents go together for feeding. The adult penguin is no more dependent on its parents and hunts for food on its own. Finally in the month of December the families leave for the sea. One advantage of this cycle is, by the time the chicks are ready to swim, it is summer and the sea is abundant with food. In the next year, the same cycle is repeated; the adults start their journey, while the young ones stay on the shore. | In the juvenile stage,it depends on its parent for food | entailment | indicator |
::stage Adult:: An adult penguin can reproduce only when they are between 3 and 8 years old, but normally penguins start breeding at the age of five. Smaller penguin species tend to reach sexual maturity earlier than the larger penguin species. Larger penguin species like King Penguin can breed twice in three years as they have 16 months of breeding cycle, whereas a little penguin can breed anytime throughout the year. All of them come on bare ground to lay eggs, while the Emperor penguins lay eggs on ice. In the month of March, the penguins travel 90-100 km inland in search of the 'perfect site' for breeding. It is a very risky journey, because those who are left behind, fall prey to predators or may even die of starvation. When the pengunis have finalized a site, in April they start mating. The penguins find their soulmates through singing and it is up to the males to attract females, and the females choose their partners accordingly. Penguins are monogamous creatures as they live with the same partner throughout their life. ::stage Egg:: A few weeks after mating, the female penguin lays 1 or 2 eggs. After laying eggs the females transfer the eggs to their male partners. In June-July, the males place the egg on their feet and incubate it. This transfer is the most important phase because, if the eggs break they can mate only in the next year, but usually during this transfer almost 20% of eggs break. The females search for food while the males incubate the eggs and wait for the partner to return. And once the female penguin returns, the penguins exchange their roles; the female incubates the egg while the male goes for food hunting. This is the most unique feature in the penguin's life cycle. In no other species of animals or birds are the fathers known to take care of their little ones. The penguin fathers are very loving, they fast for almost two months till their female partners return. During cold winds they form a close circle, to save heat for their offspring. ::stage Chick:: The eggs hatch sometime near August. It takes three days to hatch the eggs and as soon as the juvenile (baby penguin) comes out of its egg it starts calling, so that the parents learn to recognize the voice. The chicks are either brown or black in color and they have feathers that are not waterproof, so the juvenile penguin stays on land until it gets mature. During this time (in the month of September) the females return and feed the chicks by regurgitating while the males go for feeding. The male and female take turns to feed the chicks. This is repeated almost six times. It takes seven weeks to thirteen months for the chick to develop and get the waterproof feathers. When the chick is strong enough, both the parents go together for feeding. The adult penguin is no more dependent on its parents and hunts for food on its own. Finally in the month of December the families leave for the sea. One advantage of this cycle is, by the time the chicks are ready to swim, it is summer and the sea is abundant with food. In the next year, the same cycle is repeated; the adults start their journey, while the young ones stay on the shore. | In the young stage,it has feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Adult:: An adult penguin can reproduce only when they are between 3 and 8 years old, but normally penguins start breeding at the age of five. Smaller penguin species tend to reach sexual maturity earlier than the larger penguin species. Larger penguin species like King Penguin can breed twice in three years as they have 16 months of breeding cycle, whereas a little penguin can breed anytime throughout the year. All of them come on bare ground to lay eggs, while the Emperor penguins lay eggs on ice. In the month of March, the penguins travel 90-100 km inland in search of the 'perfect site' for breeding. It is a very risky journey, because those who are left behind, fall prey to predators or may even die of starvation. When the pengunis have finalized a site, in April they start mating. The penguins find their soulmates through singing and it is up to the males to attract females, and the females choose their partners accordingly. Penguins are monogamous creatures as they live with the same partner throughout their life. ::stage Egg:: A few weeks after mating, the female penguin lays 1 or 2 eggs. After laying eggs the females transfer the eggs to their male partners. In June-July, the males place the egg on their feet and incubate it. This transfer is the most important phase because, if the eggs break they can mate only in the next year, but usually during this transfer almost 20% of eggs break. The females search for food while the males incubate the eggs and wait for the partner to return. And once the female penguin returns, the penguins exchange their roles; the female incubates the egg while the male goes for food hunting. This is the most unique feature in the penguin's life cycle. In no other species of animals or birds are the fathers known to take care of their little ones. The penguin fathers are very loving, they fast for almost two months till their female partners return. During cold winds they form a close circle, to save heat for their offspring. ::stage Chick:: The eggs hatch sometime near August. It takes three days to hatch the eggs and as soon as the juvenile (baby penguin) comes out of its egg it starts calling, so that the parents learn to recognize the voice. The chicks are either brown or black in color and they have feathers that are not waterproof, so the juvenile penguin stays on land until it gets mature. During this time (in the month of September) the females return and feed the chicks by regurgitating while the males go for feeding. The male and female take turns to feed the chicks. This is repeated almost six times. It takes seven weeks to thirteen months for the chick to develop and get the waterproof feathers. When the chick is strong enough, both the parents go together for feeding. The adult penguin is no more dependent on its parents and hunts for food on its own. Finally in the month of December the families leave for the sea. One advantage of this cycle is, by the time the chicks are ready to swim, it is summer and the sea is abundant with food. In the next year, the same cycle is repeated; the adults start their journey, while the young ones stay on the shore. | In the baby stage,it depends on its parent for food | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the egg stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the egg stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage, they are big | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage, they are big | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage, they grow their water proof feathers. | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the egg stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the egg stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage,it needs its mother to keep warm | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage,it is covered with layer of feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage, it has feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage, its adult feathers come in | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage, its adult feathers come in | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage, it has feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage, its adult feathers come in | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage, its adult feathers come in | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage, it has feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage, its adult feathers come in | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the mother stage, its adult feathers come in | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage, it has feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chick stage, it has feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the big chicks stage, it has feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the parent stage, its adult feathers come in | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the little chick stage, its adult feathers come in | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the egg stage, its adult feathers come in | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby stage, it has feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage, it has feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the baby chick stage, it has feathers | not_entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the adult stage, it has feathers | entailment | indicator |
::stage Egg:: When you think of the month of April, you probably think of the spring, but it's fall in Antarctica. And that's when the ice is thick and strong enough to hold all of the emperor penguins that come out of the water and onto the ice when it's time to mate and lay eggs. The mother penguin only lays one egg and then leaves it with the father penguin, just like on a tag team. Around May or June, she goes on a long hunting trip in the ocean, just the way your mom might go to the grocery store, except that the mother penguin is gone for about two months! The father penguin keeps the egg warm, or incubates (pronounced INK-you-baits) it, in the cold climate. But the father doesn't build a nest like the birds in your tree. The father penguin balances the egg on the top of his feet and covers it with a special flap of skin that acts like a blanket. And because the father penguin can't go out and find food with an egg on his feet, he doesn't eat for about four months, using his fat to survive! ::stage Baby Chicks:: When the mother returns in July, the father gives the newly hatched chick back to her. Now, it's fathers turn to go out and find some yummy snacks while the mother babysits. And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! And although you probably prefer to chew your own food, the mother penguin spits up food stored in her stomach to feed her little chick, which weighs less than half a pound. That's less than a full soda can! The mother penguin also keeps the little chick warm in her skin flap since the chick is only covered with a thin, fluffy layer of soft feathers. Eventually, the chick grows a thicker layer of soft feathers and gets big enough to stand on the ice by itself. ::stage Big Chicks:: By December, the emperor penguin chicks are almost as big as their moms and dads! But they aren't quite ready to go out on their own. These chicks still need to go through a molt when they grow their waterproof feathers. ::stage Adult:: After their adult feathers come in, they are waterproof and ready to go out swimming and fishing for themselves. Eventually, the adults will return to the ice, lay an egg and start the emperor penguin life cycle all over again. | In the father stage, its adult feathers come in | not_entailment | indicator |
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