Transcript Unit 3
Unit 3
Vocabulary
IS IT A WALLABY OR A KANGAROO?
NO, IT’S A WALLAROO
Before You Read
pouch
a pocket like abdominal receptacle in which marsupials carry their young during
lactation
kangaroo
large plant-eating marsupial with a long powerful trail and strongly developed
hind limbs that enable it to travel by leaping, found only in Australia and new
guinea
differentiate
recognize or ascertain what makes (someone or something)
agile
able to move quickly and easily
stocky
person) broad and sturdily built
When You Read
foliage
green grass (9): plant leaves, collectively
nocturnal
(24) solitary beings: done, occurring, or active at night
joey
(16) a marsupial baby: a young kangaroo, or wallaby
life span
(19) seventeen to eighteen years: the length of time for which a
person or animal lives or a thing functions
boulder
(21) granite boulders: a large rock, typically one that has been worn
smooth by erosion
Some Words You May Need to Know
marsupial
(2) are mammals and a female marsupial has a pouch called a
marsupium, in which the young are kept through early infancy
pasture (s)
(6) land covered with grass and other low plants suitable for grazing
animal, esp. cattle or sheep
shaggy
(11) having long, thick, unkempt hair or fur
snout
(12) the projecting nose and mouth of an animal, sep. a mammal
granite
(21) a very hard, granular, crystalline, igneous rock consisting mainly
of quartz, mica, and feldspar and often used as a building stone
quest
(24) a long or arduous search for something
solitary
(25) done or existing alone
wary
(25) feeling or showing caution about possible and dangers or
problems