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英国婴儿英文书 Britannica Discovery Library 05 - Animals

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英国婴儿英文书 Britannica Discovery Library 05 - Animals About the pagination of this eBook Due to the unique page numbering scheme of this book, the electronic pagination of the eBook does not match the pagination of the printed version. To navigate the text, please use the electronic Table of Contents that ap...
英国婴儿英文书 Britannica Discovery Library 05 - Animals
About the pagination of this eBook Due to the unique page numbering scheme of this book, the electronic pagination of the eBook does not match the pagination of the printed version. To navigate the text, please use the electronic Table of Contents that appears alongside the eBook or the Search function. For citation purposes, use the page numbers that appear in the text. CHICAGO LONDON NEW DELHI PARIS SEOUL SYDNEY TAIPEI TOKYO B R I TA N N I C A L I B R A R Y DI SC OV ER Y 55 In this book, you will: discover interesting things about animals. learn new words. answer fun questions. search for animals hidden in pictures. find more animal activities at the back of the book. ANI LSMA How manyanimalscan you name in thispicture? Animals are hiding and hunting. They are flying and diving, jumping and crawling. Animals are catching food and fighting. They are caring for their young and escaping from enemies. Staying alive is an animal’s most important job. Everywhere in the world, animals are living and doing their best to stay alive. 2 3 Whereare theanimalhomes in thispicture? Birds and bugs are animals. Fish are animals too. Even people are animals! There are many, many different kinds of animals. All animals are living things. All animals need food, air, and water to stay alive. They need a safe place to live too. 54 76 Can you nam e al l the anim als in th is pict ure? Which of these animalswould you like to have as a pet? Many animals live with people. We see them every day. Others live in places far away from people. We might see these animals only at the zoo or in pictures. We probably won’t see them walking down the street! 98 Can you name an animal that lives in the treetops?Can yo u nam e an anim al t hat live s in a cav e?Can you nam e an anim al th at live s in the wat er? Can younamean animal that lives underground? Animals live where they can All kinds of animals live high above us. They live in treetops or on the edges of rocky cliffs. Many animals live on the ground or underwater. Others live deep underground. Some live in dark caves. find food and be safe. If you w ere a beave r, what w ould your ho me be like? Many animals build their own homes. The beaver’s home is called a lodge. First, the beaver builds a dam in a flowing stream. A pond forms. Then the beaver builds its lodge in the pond. The door of the lodge is always underwater. This keeps enemies from getting in. Inside, the lodge is safe and dry. 1110 Can you find any birds’ nests in thispicture? Wh ere do you see a bee hive ? Birds and bees are good builders too. A hummingbird builds a nest as small as your fist. The bald eagle’s nest is so large that a grown man could lie down in it. Hundreds of honeybees work together to build their beehive home. 1312 Wha t wo uld you r ho use be like if yo u liv ed und ergr oun d? Moles, squirrels, and rabbits are some of the animals that live in underground burrows. Walk through the grass. Do you see any small holes in the ground? These holes may lead to an animal’s home, called a burrow. You might be walking on the roof of the burrow! 1514 Can you think of another animalthat lives in a shell? Others hide inside their shells. They barely move at all. These shells are part of the animals’ bodies. Sometimes shells wash up on the beach. Every empty seashell was once an animal’s home. Some animals live inside a hard shell. Some carry their shells on their backs wherever they go. 16 17 Wha t kin d of anim al h ome wou ld y ou like to l ive in? Where doyou liketo takenaps? Turtles and snails have shells too. Sometimes a turtle becomes scared or sleepy. Then zzzzziipp! The turtle pulls in its head! And zzzzzuupp! The turtle pulls in its legs! The turtle’s shell is a safe place to hide from enemies. It is a good place to take a nap too. 1918 Can you find • Bear in its lair • Dog on a log • Goose on a moose • Frog on a hog • Rat under a hat • Mole in a bowl • Owl in a towel • Bug on a mug • Skunk in a trunk these animals? 2120 Where is your nose? Where is your mouth? Where are your ears? Where are your eyes? How many eyes do you have? How many fingers have you got to feel things with? Some animals have all these parts in the strangest places. Just look... 2322 How have you used your fingers today? Would you like to taste the grass with your toes? Insects don’t have fingers. They use feelers called antennae. The antennae grow out of the top of the insect’s head! Bees, butterflies, and houseflies don’t taste things with their mouths. These insects taste with their feet! A slug is a snail without a shell. Slugs have four antennae. They use their two short antennae to smell the world around them! 2524 Many spiders have eight eyes to see with. Some animals have even more eyes than this. The scallop is another animal that lives in a shell. Around the edges of its shell there are about 100 tiny eyes! The eyes look like little black dots. People hear sound through their two ears. But crickets hear with their front legs! 2726 Wild animals must take care of themselves. They have all kinds of ways to stay safe. This makes it easier for them to hide from danger. It helps them hunt without being seen. Many animals have coloring that matches their surroundings. 2928 What other animals can you find in thesepictures? Can you find the frog ? Can you find the snow shoe rabb it? In the wintertime, the coats of many animals turn white. These animals are hard to see in the snow. A frog is hiding in this picture. The frog is the same color and the same shape as the leaves and plants around it. 30 31 Can you find the butt erfly ? Can you findthe walkingstick? Many insects fool their The owl-eye butterfly has big spots on its wings. These spots look like scary eyes. Enemies think an owl is watching them and are frightened away! The walking stick looks more like a small twig than an insect. Its enemies don’t want to eat a twig! enemies by the way they look too. 3332 Animals in danger have all kinds Many birds and insects fly off as fast as they can. Others attack. Lots of animals are fast runners. Kangaroos leap away on strong legs. Some snakes and other animals shoot poison at their enemies. of ways to protect themselves. 3534 Can you think of another way an animal protects itself? The skunk sprays a terrible smell when danger approaches. When it feels safe, the puffer fish does not look very unusual. But when frightened, puffer fish puff up like a big bubble. Some even have sharp spines that pop out all over their bodies. Enemies are scared off fast! 3736 Sometimes mother animals leave their babies alone during the day. Enemies will follow the mother. They will not discover the babies. This way the babies stay safe. Many animals carry their babies on their backs wherever they go. 3938 Protecting babies from danger is not always easy. Father birds and fish sometimes baby-sit their eggs. The male sea catfish carries the eggs in his mouth. When the eggs hatch, the babies swim out of his mouth. The hungry father catfish will finally be able to eat! The male emperor penguin keeps his egg warm under his feathery skin. The egg sits on his feet. He does not eat or move until his baby hatches. 4140 Many animals must In the summer, the black bear has plenty to eat. When winter comes, there is little food. The bear finds a place to sleep until spring. Its body does not need food until it wakes up. hunt for food all the time. other ways to keep from being hungry. 4342 Some animals have Animals help people in lots of ways. Cows, goats, and camels are a few of the animals that give us milk. From milk we make cheese, butter, and yogurt.One way is by giving us many foods. Chickens and some other birds give us eggs. Bees make honey from the nectar in flowers. 44 45 Some people use big, rough sponges in the bathtub. They use sponges to wash their cars too. These sponges were once living animals that made their homes in the sea. We make sweaters and other warm clothes from sheep’s wool. 4746 Animals help us in Some animals have jobs helping people. Horses, donkeys, and oxen pull wagons and carts. They work in fields all over the world. many other ways too. 4948 If you have a pet, what kind of pet do youhave? If you don’t have a pet, what kind of pet would you like to have? Animals help us get from one place to another more quickly. Horses, camels, and sledge dogs are a few of the animals that help us with this job. Sometimes these animals are pets too. Pets are an important part of people’s lives. Cats and dogs have lived with people for thousands of years. 5150 Can y ou th ink of a w ay th at anim als h elp peop le? Pets need to be treated with love and kindness. They need food, water, and a place to sleep, just like people do. They should never be teased, hurt, or frightened. What is the strangestpet youcan think of? Always be good to your pet! Unlike long ago, today people have all kinds of different pets. Bunnies, snakes, and guinea pigs are pets. So are parrots, fish, and many other animals. A pet turkey in Madagascar A boy with anOurebia fawn inSouth Africa An Evenik girl with pet reindeer in Inner Mongolia Irish child ren with t heir dog An ocelot in Peru A boy watching goldfish in their tank An A meri can girl with a bu nny A pet hamster in Thailand 5352 Have youbeen to azoo? What animals didyou seethere? Wild animals are not meant to be pets. They are happier in their own kind of place. Zookeepers build special homes for zoo animals. These homes are much like their homes in the wild. Every zoo animal gets the kinds of foods it likes best. 5554 People are taking up more of the land where these animals live. Some people hunt these animals too. People and other animals live and play and work together all over the world. But many animals are in danger. Some may soon be lost from our world forever. 5756 The list of animals in danger is very long. Some kinds of wolves and wild cats are in danger. So are different kinds of ducks, sea turtles, and snakes. This list of animals in danger is growing all the time. Luckily, some people are working hard to protect the animals. These people have an important job saving our wildlife. 58 59 Wh at a re you r favo rite anim als? W e live in a wo nde rful world full of animals! without all the animals that live here with us! We are lucky to have the fun, friendship, and beauty that animals bring to our world. Our world would be so quiet and colorless 6160 Animal Guessing Game Cut four pieces of thick paper in half. Then cut each half in half again. You will have a total of 16 pieces of paper. These are the cards you will use to play the animal guessing game. Now go through this book and find 16 differ- ent animals. Draw a picture of one of the ani- mals on one side of a card, leaving the oppo- site side blank. Write the name of the animal on the same side as your drawing. Then draw another animal on another card, and continue until all the cards have a picture of an animal on them. Turn the cards over and write one or two facts about the animal on the blank side. For instance, if you draw a giraffe on one side, the other side might say, “I have a very long neck” and “I am brown and white.” Now see how much your friends and family know! Show them the cards one by one. Can they guess the correct animals just from the clues you put on the cards? You can also make a set of cards with a friend, each of you think- ing up eight different animals. Make a Strange New Animal Get lots of colored paper, crayons, and colored pencils. You can also use sticks, yarn, pieces of cloth, or empty toilet paper rolls. Imagine an animal no one has ever seen before. Draw on paper or glue pieces of colored paper and other materials together to make your strange new animal. If you have old magazines with pictures of animals in them, use these too. Cut out body parts from different animals and glue them together to make your new animal! What is this new kind of animal called? You can write its name on the paper or tell others what you have named it. Does it have a tail? Wings? Claws? Where does it live? Draw the animal’s home or describe what the home looks like. What does it eat? Draw a picture of the kinds of food your animal would eat. Animal Home Hunt Find a friend to take a walk with. Explore your backyard, a park, or any outdoor place. Look closely all around you as you walk. Look at the ground, in bushes, under rocks, and high up in the trees. See how many animal homes you can find. Look for anthills, bird nests, even doghouses! When you get back to your own house, draw a map of the places you went. Show on the map the places where you found animal homes. 1 2 3 6362 antennae (an TEN eye) the long feelers on the heads of most insects burrow (BUR oh) a hole dug in the ground by an animal to live in hatches (HACH ez) comes out of an egg lair (lare) the place where a wild animal rests or sleeps lodge (lawj) a beaver’s home or shelter nectar (NEK ter) a sweet liquid found in many flowers spines (spynz) stiff, pointed parts that stick out sharply on some animals and plants twig (twig) a small branch, usually without leaves wildlife (WILD life) wild animals that do not live with people G L O S S A R Y 55 ANI LSMA Fun Ways to Learn about A IMN L SA The activities on the previous page will help your child expand his or her knowledge, skills, and self- confidence. Young children learn best when they are engaged in activities that they are genuinely interested in, so don’t insist they continue with things they seem to be growing bored with. Animal Guessing Game. Help your child cut the cards so that they are basically the same size and shape. If you’re the one doing the clue-writing on the cards, try to get your child to provide those clues himself or herself, and be sure to write down the exact words. Your child is more likely to pay attention to the words if you write them down exactly as they were spoken. If your child can’t think of any or doesn’t know what kinds of clues would work, suggest ideas. You might pose your suggestions as questions (e.g., “Is there something we could say about this animal’s color?”) so that the child is more of a decision maker in what information the cards provide, even if he or she isn’t able to write yet. Make an Animal. Be sure to provide plenty of crayons, colored pencils, paper, and glue. Also have ready string, yarn, ribbon, fabric swatches, or other materials that can be glued to paper. If the children are too young to use scissors, cut shapes for them yourself, cut animal photos from magazines into pieces, or encourage them to tear out the shapes from paper by hand. Let the children create a collage effect on paper as they invent their animal. Let their creativity follow its own course, even if what they are creating doesn’t look “right.” Ask questions about their animals, and ask them to tell you what they call the kind of animal they’ve invented. Kids love to come up with silly new words! Animal Home Hunt. Children are intrinsically curious. The more their curiosity is aroused, the more they will want to learn. As you walk, let your children be the first to discover evidence of animal homes. If they miss something that you see, subtly direct their attention and see if they spot it by themselves first before you point it out. As you walk, ask questions like, “What kind of animal do you think lives in this hole?” “How do you think the ants moved all this dirt?” and “What did the birds use to build this nest?” Illustrations, page layouts, and processing by Repro India Ltd. (www.reproindialtd.com). Page 52: Photos: Corbis; (clockwise from top left) Wolfgang Kaehler; Michael Pole; William Gottlieb; Jeremy Horner. Page 53: Photos: Corbis; (clockwise from far left) Wolfgang Kaehler; Peter Turnley; Earl and Nazima Kowall; Peter Johnson © 2005, 2008 by Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. International Standard Book Number: 978-1-59339-823-1 No part of this work may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Britannica Discovery Library: Volume 5: Animals 2005, 2008 Britannica.com may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.britannica.com. Encyclopædia Britannica, Britannica, and the Thistle logo are registered trademarks of Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Helping Children Get the Most out of the Volume 64 A IMN L SA International Standard Book Number: 978-1-59339-828-6 (set) (volume 5)
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