premise
stringclasses
41 values
hypothesis
stringlengths
8
198
label
stringclasses
2 values
config
stringclasses
3 values
::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.
At in her mouth location did the penguin mamas store the food for their chicks.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Use their own fat do the penguin fathers eat when they have to sit on the eggs for months.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Fly away from time to time do the penguin fathers eat when they have to sit on the eggs for months.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Use their own fat does a baby penguin's father get nutrition while he's taking care of the egg for months.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Fly away from time to time does a baby penguin's father get nutrition while he's taking care of the egg for months.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Use their own fat will the penguin papas consume at what point they have to sit on the eggs for months.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Fly away from time to time will the penguin papas consume at what point they have to sit on the eggs for months.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
One many eggs does a mother penguin lay.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Multiple eggs many eggs does a mother penguin lay.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
One amount of eggs will a mama penguin deposit.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Multiple eggs amount of eggs will a mama penguin deposit.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
One number of penguin eggs are laid at once.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Multiple eggs number of penguin eggs are laid at once.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
April month do penguins usually mate in.
entailment
lookup
::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.
February month do penguins usually mate in.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
April month will penguins most often mate in.
entailment
lookup
::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.
February month will penguins most often mate in.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Penguins get together to mate during april month of the year.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Penguins get together to mate during february month of the year.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Stand with their parents do baby penguin chicks stay warm.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Stand in the sun do baby penguin chicks stay warm.
not_entailment
lookup
::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 stand with their parents way will infant penguin chicks stay warm.
entailment
lookup
::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 stand in the sun way will infant penguin chicks stay warm.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Stand with their parents does a baby penguin stay warm.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Stand in the sun does a baby penguin stay warm.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
The father parent incubates a penguin egg.
entailment
lookup
::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.
The mother parent incubates a penguin egg.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
The father parent incubates a penguin egg.
entailment
lookup
::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.
The mother parent incubates a penguin egg.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
One many eggs does an Emperor penguin lay.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Four many eggs does an Emperor penguin lay.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
One number of eggs does a female emperor penguin lay at once.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Four number of eggs does a female emperor penguin lay at once.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
One amount of eggs will an Emperor penguin deposit.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Four amount of eggs will an Emperor penguin deposit.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Spits up food does a penguin feed its chick.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Using its fat does a penguin feed its chick.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Spits up food method does a penguin use to give food to baby penguins.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Using its fat method does a penguin use to give food to baby penguins.
not_entailment
lookup
::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 spits up food way will a penguin feed its baby.
entailment
lookup
::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 using its fat way will a penguin feed its baby.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Goes fishing does one penguin parent do while the other is caring for the chick.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Doesn't eat for four months does one penguin parent do while the other is caring for the chick.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Goes fishing activity is the mother penguin doing when the father penguin is with the hatching eggs.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Doesn't eat for four months activity is the mother penguin doing when the father penguin is with the hatching eggs.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
One penguin parent cares for the chick while the other parent does goes fishing.
entailment
lookup
::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.
One penguin parent cares for the chick while the other parent does doesn't eat for four months.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Parent's skin flap keeps a baby penguin chick warm.
entailment
lookup
::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.
Waterproof feathers keeps a baby penguin chick warm.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Balanced on feet does a penguin keep its egg.
entailment
lookup
::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 a nest does a penguin keep its egg.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
Balanced on feet is a penguin's egg kept by its parent.
entailment
lookup
::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 a nest is a penguin's egg kept by its parent.
not_entailment
lookup
::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.
At balanced on feet location will a penguin keep its egg.
entailment
lookup
::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.
At in a nest location will a penguin keep its egg.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
A clear, jelly-like substance surrounds toad eggs.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Hard egg shell surrounds toad eggs.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
A clear, jelly-like substance surrounds toad eggs.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Hard egg shell surrounds toad eggs.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
A clear, jelly-like substance are toad eggs enveloped in.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Hard egg shell are toad eggs enveloped in.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Sticky tongues do toads use to catch food.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Hands and feet do toads use to catch food.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Sticky tongues is employed by a toad to grab food.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Hands and feet is employed by a toad to grab food.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Sticky tongues thing or things will toads use to catch food.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Hands and feet thing or things will toads use to catch food.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
To breathe air do toadlets develop lungs.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
To breathe water do toadlets develop lungs.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
To breathe air will toadlets mature lungs.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
To breathe water will toadlets mature lungs.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Lungs are parts of toadlets in order to help them do to breathe air.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Lungs are parts of toadlets in order to help them do to breathe water.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
They make loud mating calls do male toads do to attract female toads.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
They are quiet do male toads do to attract female toads.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
They make loud mating calls thing or things will male toads will to attract female toads.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
They are quiet thing or things will male toads will to attract female toads.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Male toads will do they make loud mating calls in an effort to get the attention of female toads.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Male toads will do they are quiet in an effort to get the attention of female toads.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
It grows two back legs and two front legs will happen when a tadpole becomes a toad.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
It keeps its tail and gill will happen when a tadpole becomes a toad.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
It grows two back legs and two front legs does the body change when it goes from tadpole to toad.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
It keeps its tail and gill does the body change when it goes from tadpole to toad.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
It grows two back legs and two front legs will happens after a tadpole becomes a toad.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
It keeps its tail and gill will happens after a tadpole becomes a toad.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Stream or pond does a mother toad lay her eggs.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Land does a mother toad lay her eggs.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Stream or pond do toads lay their eggs.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Land do toads lay their eggs.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
At stream or pond location will a mama toad deposit her eggs.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
At land location will a mama toad deposit her eggs.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Gills does a tadpole use to breathe in the water.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Lungs does a tadpole use to breathe in the water.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Gills body organ enables a tadpole to breathe while it's underwater.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Lungs body organ enables a tadpole to breathe while it's underwater.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Gills thing or things will a tadpole use to breathe in the water.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Lungs thing or things will a tadpole use to breathe in the water.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Toadlet is toad called that has developed legs but is not yet fully grown.
entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Embryo is toad called that has developed legs but is not yet fully grown.
not_entailment
lookup
::stage egg:: Before human beings are released into the world as newborn babies, they begin to develop inside their mother's womb. A toad, however, starts out as an egg. No - not like the egg that you scramble in the morning for breakfast. Toad eggs are surrounded by a clear, jelly-like substance. When a mother toad is ready to have her babies, she will lay her eggs in a stream or a pond in a long strand. Toads have been known to lay hundreds and even thousands of eggs. In the middle of a toad egg, you can see a tiny black dot. Eventually, this little black dot will become a toad! Right now, it is an embryo (an unborn baby). The embryo will continue to grow and grow until it is ready to be born. Some of the eggs will not make it, and the journey will end for them here. ::stage tadpole:: The eggs hatch into tadpoles, or 'pollywogs'. Tadpoles have a tail and gills, which means that they need to live in water to breathe. Tadpoles have special jaws that they use to begin eating algae. The algae provide the nutrition the adpoles need to grow healthy and strong. ::stage toadlet:: Think of the third stage as the teenage years of the toad. While the toadlets have developed legs and almost look like toads, they aren't quite there yet. This is the toadlet stage. Toadlets have sticky tongues that they use to catch their food. They also have developed lungs at this stage, allowing them to breathe air instead of water. While toadlets are able to survive on land, they need to go back in the water frequently because they are easily dehydrated. ::stage toad:: The final stage is here! What started out as a little egg has now blossomed into an adult toad. The adult toad has two back legs and two front legs that it uses to jump around the land. The adults tail is gone and its lungs are fully developed. Now it is time for the toad to continue the life cycle and make babies of its own, so the adult toad will start looking for love. Well, not exactly - in most of the animal world, scientists call it 'trying to find a mate.' This starts pretty early, as females are normally ready to have toad babies around the age of three and the males around the age of two. You'll know when it's mating season for toads, especially if you live in a tropical area. After a summer rainstorm, the male toads let out loud mating calls in hopes of attracting lady toads. The female toad will lay eggs, and the cycle begins all over again.
Toadlet thing is toad named that has matureed legs but is not yet fully grown.
entailment
lookup