input
stringlengths 143
431
| output
stringlengths 3
42
|
|---|---|
Question: What type of water formation is formed by clouds?
Facts: Beads of water can be formed by clouds.
Choices: (A) pearls, (B) streams, (C) shells, (D) diamonds, (E) rain, (F) beads, (G) cooled, (H) liquid
|
beads
|
Question: Where do beads of water come from?
Facts: Vapor turning into a liquid leaves behind beads of water
Choices: (A) Too much water, (B) underground systems, (C) When the water is too cold, (D) Water spills, (E) Vapor turning into a liquid, (F) Warm air moving into cold air, (G) At the peak of a mountain, (H) To another location like underground
|
Vapor turning into a liquid
|
Question: What forms beads of water?
Facts: Steam forms beads of water.
Choices: (A) Necklaces., (B) Steam., (C) Glass beads ., (D) a wave, (E) tiny, (F) a solute, (G) rain, (H) Bracelets.
|
Steam.
|
Question: what kind of beads are formed from vapor condensing?
Facts: h2o beads are formed by h2o vapor condensing
Choices: (A) tiny, (B) H20, (C) h2o, (D) carbon, (E) hydrogen, (F) rain, (G) oxygen, (H) Dew
|
h2o
|
Question: what kind of beads are formed by their vapor condensing?
Facts: beads of h2o are formed by h2o vapor condensing
Choices: (A) h2o, (B) rain, (C) tiny, (D) H20, (E) CO 2, (F) blue, (G) Aves, (H) Dew
|
h2o
|
Question: What happens to the heat energy during condensation.
Facts: When water vapor condenses heat energy goes to the remaining air molecules
Choices: (A) It goes to the remaining air molecules, (B) Temperature changing, (C) they travel great distances, (D) raising their temperature, (E) liquid precipitation, (F) changing phenomenon, (G) Movement of an air mass, (H) electrons in motion
|
It goes to the remaining air molecules
|
Question: Vapor doing what forms beads of liquid?
Facts: beads of liquid are formed by vapor condensing
Choices: (A) energy barrier, (B) condensing, (C) a solute, (D) boiling, (E) unidirectional, (F) motion, (G) kinetic energy, (H) evaporation
|
condensing
|
Question: Beads of water are formed when?
Facts: Beads of water are formed during the chilling season
Choices: (A) heat is produced, (B) Temperature changing, (C) forest is destroyed, (D) refract or absorb., (E) body temperature reduces, (F) precipitation, (G) Movement of an air mass, (H) during the chilling season
|
during the chilling season
|
Question: Where is water likely to form beads?
Facts: Water beads form on cold surfaces.
Choices: (A) aqueous solution, (B) on cold surfaces, (C) jungles of the sea, (D) colder weather, (E) Evaporation, (F) colder and wetter, (G) Wet weather, (H) streams.
|
on cold surfaces
|
Question: Removing what from food will preserve it?
Facts: removing moisture from food preserves it.
Choices: (A) flavor, (B) body water, (C) heat energy, (D) color, (E) Water, (F) Bodily water, (G) moisture, (H) ingredients
|
moisture
|
Question: What are two ways you can save food?
Facts: You can save food with dehydration or salt.
Choices: (A) Fully cooking the oysters, (B) Burning fuel and air, (C) Bread it and fry it, (D) Water it down and drink it, (E) converting electricity to heat, (F) lowered energy cost, (G) Dehydration and salting, (H) Burn it and throw it away
|
Dehydration and salting
|
Question: What does salting food do to it?
Facts: Salting food preserves it
Choices: (A) decrease stamina, (B) evaporation, (C) hydration, (D) Preserves it, (E) Causes bacteria to spread, (F) chemical changes, (G) Causes it to rot, (H) Cooks it
|
Preserves it
|
Question: What can prevent food spoilage?
Facts: dehydrating food prevent spoilage.
Choices: (A) prolactin release, (B) one celled organisms, (C) hydrating food, (D) cleaning food, (E) airing out food, (F) Electric generators, (G) a hydraulic system, (H) dehydrating food
|
dehydrating food
|
Question: What can be removed to preserve food?
Facts: Removing water preserves food.
Choices: (A) water, (B) nutrients, (C) toxins, (D) salt, (E) A virus, (F) sugar, (G) leeches, (H) peat
|
water
|
Question: Which of the following has the most antioxidant benefits for the body?
Facts: Blueberries can be eaten as a preserved food still with antioxidant benefits
Choices: (A) preserved muskrat, (B) preserved blueberries, (C) antibiotics, (D) hamburger, (E) hydrogen peroxide, (F) prolactin release, (G) evaporation, (H) Thyroid-stimulating hormone
|
preserved blueberries
|
Question: Dehydrating food is used to make it what?
Facts: Dehydrating food is used to make it last longer.
Choices: (A) last longer, (B) survive, (C) go bad, (D) burn up, (E) get started, (F) throw out, (G) Relieve pain, (H) dormant state
|
last longer
|
Question: Beef jerky is what?
Facts: beef jerky is preserved
Choices: (A) low in protein content, (B) wet, (C) prone to spoilage, (D) nutrients, (E) barrel-shaped, (F) Relieve pain, (G) preserved, (H) layers of fat
|
preserved
|
Question: How is food preserved?
Facts: food is preserved by drying
Choices: (A) liquid, (B) moistness, (C) hydration, (D) bacteria, (E) mold, (F) heat, (G) Cooking, (H) drying
|
drying
|
Question: Slow cooking food in an oven will cause it to be what?
Facts: slow cooking food in an oven can be done to preserve it
Choices: (A) staying warm, (B) kinetic, (C) dangerous, (D) dry and hot, (E) preserved, (F) dormant state, (G) reduced heat, (H) hydration
|
preserved
|
Question: What is used to preserve food?
Facts: food is preserved in a slow oven
Choices: (A) salt, (B) Energy, (C) oven, (D) fats, (E) sugar, (F) sodium, (G) marine, (H) bamboo
|
oven
|
Question: What is used to preserve food?
Facts: Something from Nesco is used for preserving food
Choices: (A) evaporation, (B) Something from Nesco, (C) white vinegar, (D) Calcium carbonate, (E) salt and water., (F) layers of fat, (G) Exfoliation, (H) adding heat
|
Something from Nesco
|
Question: Reproduction is the process by which living things what?
Facts: Reproduction is the process by which living things give birth to babies
Choices: (A) Most plants, (B) allow growth, (C) spread flower seeds, (D) have wide set eyes, (E) members of their own species, (F) have birthing hips, (G) have quiet laughter, (H) give birth to babies
|
give birth to babies
|
Question: What is the transmission of genes?
Facts: Reproduction involves the transmission of genes
Choices: (A) Reproduction, (B) Cancer, (C) Sex, (D) Pollination, (E) Most plants, (F) mechanical, (G) by indirect light, (H) a wave
|
Reproduction
|
Question: what creates a completely immobile human?
Facts: reproduction results in a completely immobile human
Choices: (A) burning coal, (B) birthdays, (C) lungs, (D) tectonic plates, (E) sports, (F) reproduction, (G) our nearest star, (H) fossil fuels
|
reproduction
|
Question: what reproduces to give rise to offspring?
Facts: reproduction is the process by which plants give rise to offspring
Choices: (A) fungi, (B) embryos, (C) mammals, (D) plants, (E) density, (F) clouds, (G) Flowers, (H) multiply
|
plants
|
Question: What is the process by which living things give rise to offspring?
Facts: Sex is the process by which living things give rise to offspring.
Choices: (A) DNA, (B) photosynthesis, (C) bird, (D) sex, (E) subtraction, (F) gametes, (G) eggs, (H) ovum
|
sex
|
Question: What comes from reproduction?
Facts: Reproduction is the process by which living things produce children.
Choices: (A) babies, (B) protein, (C) pollution, (D) dead cells, (E) Energy, (F) seeds, (G) Most plants, (H) children
|
children
|
Question: The process by which genes are passed is
Facts: Reproduction is the process by which genes are passed
Choices: (A) Most plants, (B) flow of electrons, (C) mitosis, (D) Summer, (E) respiration, (F) mutation, (G) mechanical, (H) reproduction
|
reproduction
|
Question: What gives rise to offspring?
Facts: sex gives rise to offspring
Choices: (A) sex, (B) spring, (C) bird, (D) DNA, (E) ova, (F) production, (G) factories, (H) ovum
|
sex
|
Question: What is the process by which living things give rise to offspring?
Facts: sex is the process by which living things give rise to offspring
Choices: (A) sex, (B) diploid, (C) ovum, (D) bird, (E) ovary, (F) eggs, (G) gametes, (H) DNA
|
sex
|
Question: How do living things have children?
Facts: Living things use reproduction to have children.
Choices: (A) death, (B) people, (C) humans, (D) babies, (E) it needs them, (F) reproduction, (G) mitosis, (H) production
|
reproduction
|
Question: The stomach does what in the body?
Facts: The stomach breaks food into nutrients for the body.
Choices: (A) decreases its bodily water, (B) kills all germs, (C) breaks food into nutrients, (D) stores bile, (E) heat is produced, (F) extracts water from food, (G) get chemical reactions started, (H) cause people to become sick.
|
breaks food into nutrients
|
Question: The digestive system breaks food down into what for the body?
Facts: The digestive system breaks food into fuel for the body.
Choices: (A) strength, (B) sugar, (C) meals, (D) fats, (E) lipids, (F) fuel, (G) hunger, (H) matter
|
fuel
|
Question: The body needs the digestive system to do what?
Facts: The body needs the digestive system to function
Choices: (A) Burn calories while exercising, (B) survival, (C) Fall asleep easily at night, (D) Digesting food, (E) get started, (F) Absorb food without processing it, (G) Converted sugar, (H) Break down food
|
Break down food
|
Question: Which organ helps break down food into nutrients for our bodies?
Facts: The pancreas is important for breaking food into nutrients for our bodies
Choices: (A) heart, (B) pancreas, (C) pipe, (D) bacteria, (E) pituitary, (F) enzymes, (G) Proteins, (H) humans
|
pancreas
|
Question: what does the digestive system use to produce nutrients for the body?
Facts: the digestive system uses catabolism to produce nutrients for the body
Choices: (A) Proteins, (B) Enzymes, (C) oysters, (D) catabolism, (E) lungs, (F) ice cubes, (G) hair, (H) nutrients
|
catabolism
|
Question: What does the digestive system break into nutrients for the body?
Facts: the digestive system breaks meat into nutrients for the body
Choices: (A) fats, (B) paper, (C) lipids, (D) meat, (E) apples, (F) corn, (G) music, (H) the colon
|
meat
|
Question: What provides the regeneration of cells for the body?
Facts: The digestive system provides the regeneration of cells for the body.
Choices: (A) Thyroid-stimulating hormone, (B) the kiln, (C) Earthworms, (D) the kitchen, (E) the digestive system, (F) prolactin release, (G) Pituitary gland, (H) the corona
|
the digestive system
|
Question: What does digestion absorb?
Facts: digestion absorbs food for the body
Choices: (A) food, (B) lipids, (C) oxygen, (D) blood, (E) sugar, (F) O2, (G) water, (H) Energy
|
food
|
Question: What is needed for the body to grow and remain healthy?
Facts: the digestive system is needed for the body to grow and remain healthy
Choices: (A) Organic compounds, (B) Hair on the head, (C) carbohydrates, (D) Fast response time, (E) The digestive system, (F) Hair on the feet, (G) deoxyribonucleic acid, (H) organic molecules
|
The digestive system
|
Question: What breaks food into nutrients for the body?
Facts: Something that tapeworms do not have breaks food into nutrients for the body
Choices: (A) Fully cooking the oysters, (B) secretion of acids and bases, (C) Eating and drinking, (D) the most widely used biofuel, (E) the stage of citokinesis, (F) To conserve energy, (G) Something that tapeworms do not have, (H) hydration of their cells
|
Something that tapeworms do not have
|
Question: What enables the body to grow?
Facts: the digestive system enable our body to grow
Choices: (A) single-celled organisms, (B) aerobic capacity, (C) By coral exoskeletons, (D) carbohydrates, (E) genetic material, (F) deoxyribonucleic acid, (G) the digestive system, (H) Males and females
|
the digestive system
|
Question: what does the digestive system break food into for the body?
Facts: the digestive system breaks food into iron for the body
Choices: (A) sugar, (B) fatty, (C) iron, (D) lipids, (E) edible, (F) liquid, (G) matter, (H) Energy
|
iron
|
Question: Where do platypus females lay their eggs?
Facts: platypus females lay their eggs in the ground
Choices: (A) swea, (B) tree, (C) bushes, (D) fields, (E) ground, (F) autumn, (G) plate, (H) holder
|
ground
|
Question: what females nest in a burrow and wait for the hatching?
Facts: Platypus females nest in a burrow and wait for the hatching
Choices: (A) ostrich, (B) burrowing rabbits, (C) loose soil, (D) insects, (E) warm-blooded, (F) honeybees, (G) rooster, (H) platypus
|
platypus
|
Question: Where do platypus females construct their homes for egg laying?
Facts: Platypus females lay their eggs in homes constructed in soft soil.
Choices: (A) loose dirt, (B) out in the open, (C) loose soil, (D) Summer, (E) rocky areas, (F) autumn, (G) soft soil, (H) compacted soil
|
soft soil
|
Question: What do echidna lay?
Facts: echidnas lay eggs
Choices: (A) food, (B) fat, (C) seeds, (D) eggs, (E) edible, (F) tadpoles, (G) nektar, (H) sacs
|
eggs
|
Question: What lays their eggs in a burrow?
Facts: some mammals lay their eggs in a burrow
Choices: (A) no mammals, (B) all mammals, (C) dogs, (D) animals, (E) honeybees, (F) insects, (G) some mammals, (H) alpacas
|
some mammals
|
Question: How do platypus lay eggs?
Facts: Platypus females lay eggs in a dug out area.
Choices: (A) epidermis and dermis, (B) on a flat plane, (C) in a tree, (D) fur and fat, (E) during the day, (F) it keeps an organism warm, (G) in a dug out area, (H) in the water
|
in a dug out area
|
Question: what lays their eggs in a burrow?
Facts: monotremes lay their eggs in a burrow
Choices: (A) mammals, (B) alpacas, (C) loose soil, (D) animals, (E) monotremes, (F) honeybees, (G) insects, (H) ducks
|
monotremes
|
Question: What is the distinguishing feature of monotremes?
Facts: Monotremes lay eggs
Choices: (A) They lay eggs, (B) the eyes, (C) Veins and arteries., (D) eardrum, (E) four limbs, (F) layers of fat, (G) They have thick fur, (H) fur and fat
|
They lay eggs
|
Question: What does not normally lay eggs?
Facts: Mammals do not usually lay eggs.
Choices: (A) swea, (B) insects, (C) Mammal, (D) chickens, (E) cows, (F) animals, (G) parasites, (H) ducks
|
Mammal
|
Question: Most mollusks have what?
Facts: Most mollusks have protective of bony armor
Choices: (A) aerobic capacity, (B) scarce resources, (C) layers of fat, (D) an organism's body, (E) protective parents, (F) angry neighbors, (G) extra arms, (H) protective bony armor
|
protective bony armor
|
Question: What do most mussles have?
Facts: Most mussels have shells
Choices: (A) Epidermis, (B) ice, (C) shells, (D) snow, (E) fur, (F) names, (G) a cuticle, (H) alveoli
|
shells
|
Question: Some invertebrates may have which feature?
Facts: Some invertebrates have shells.
Choices: (A) invertebrate, (B) fat, (C) gills, (D) exception, (E) three, (F) mollusk, (G) complex, (H) shell
|
shell
|
Question: what usually has a shell?
Facts: most oysters have shells
Choices: (A) an object, (B) humans, (C) animals, (D) density, (E) tortoises, (F) barnacles, (G) h2o, (H) oysters
|
oysters
|
Question: Most soft-bodied invertebrates have what?
Facts: Most soft-bodied invertebrates have shells
Choices: (A) hands, (B) epidermal, (C) protected, (D) a cuticle, (E) hard, (F) alveoli, (G) shells, (H) exterior
|
shells
|
Question: What have shells?
Facts: most cephalopods have shells
Choices: (A) keeps the organism warm, (B) lima beans, (C) whales, (D) objects that have mass, (E) it needs them, (F) most cephalopods, (G) barnacles, (H) sharks
|
most cephalopods
|
Question: What do mollusks contain?
Facts: mollusks contain calcium carbonate
Choices: (A) harmful substances, (B) Organic compounds, (C) bacon, (D) cayenne, (E) acetic acid, (F) dogs, (G) Chlorophyll, (H) Calcium carbonate
|
Calcium carbonate
|
Question: What can shells protect?
Facts: Shells can protect soft bodies
Choices: (A) fronts, (B) animals, (C) soft bodies, (D) coastlines, (E) fur, (F) blood, (G) critical organs, (H) hard bodies
|
soft bodies
|
Question: Mussels have what?
Facts: Mussels have shells.
Choices: (A) seaweed, (B) arms, (C) Energy, (D) a shell, (E) warmth, (F) bacteria, (G) Length, (H) legs
|
a shell
|
Question: what do the second-largest invertebrate group have?
Facts: Most of the second-largest invertebrate group have shells
Choices: (A) shells, (B) a cuticle, (C) insects, (D) barnacles, (E) animals, (F) tortoises, (G) alveoli, (H) honeybees
|
shells
|
Question: Most of what type of animal is known for having a shell?
Facts: Most snails have shells.
Choices: (A) fossils, (B) toads, (C) eggs, (D) swea, (E) small, (F) insects, (G) porous, (H) snail
|
snail
|
Question: What is when rocks are broken down?
Facts: Physical weathering is when rocks are broken down by means.
Choices: (A) roof weathering, (B) Plant growth is reduced, (C) brick weathering, (D) Physical weathering, (E) remains of prehistoric life, (F) at or near the margins, (G) home weathering, (H) major threat to health
|
Physical weathering
|
Question: What can cause rocks to break down?
Facts: Water can break down rocks
Choices: (A) Wind Barriers, (B) Protective Barriers, (C) Stone Sealers, (D) wind, (E) mines, (F) Water, (G) erosion, (H) Gravity
|
Water
|
Question: What weathers rocks?
Facts: water can weather rocks
Choices: (A) soil, (B) streams, (C) a delta, (D) calcite, (E) erosion, (F) water, (G) grass, (H) the sun
|
water
|
Question: What is formed when rocks break down?
Facts: Detritus is formed when rocks are broken down.
Choices: (A) plants, (B) clouds, (C) sand, (D) coastlines, (E) detritus, (F) deltas, (G) water, (H) alluvial
|
detritus
|
Question: what can break down rocks?
Facts: rocks can be broken down from ice wedging
Choices: (A) Jellyfish, (B) sea urchins, (C) deltas, (D) erosion, (E) ice wedging, (F) room temperature, (G) clouds, (H) cliffs
|
ice wedging
|
Question: Mechanical weathering produces
Facts: mechanical weathering produces Sediment
Choices: (A) Sand dollars, (B) calcite, (C) homogenous, (D) Sediment, (E) soft soil, (F) rainfall, (G) cactuses, (H) movement
|
Sediment
|
Question: What occurs when rocks are weathered mechanically?
Facts: Sediment occurs when rocks are weathered mechanically
Choices: (A) Sediment, (B) flooding, (C) movement, (D) Winter, (E) deltas, (F) wind, (G) amoebae, (H) friction
|
Sediment
|
Question: What is it called when rocks are broken down mechanically?
Facts: erosion is when rocks are broken down mechanically
Choices: (A) mines, (B) dangerous, (C) coral reef, (D) cracking, (E) tube, (F) loose soil, (G) calcite, (H) erosion
|
erosion
|
Question: What are broken down by water?
Facts: rocks are broken down by water
Choices: (A) rocks, (B) germs, (C) shells, (D) lipids, (E) soils, (F) sand, (G) dead, (H) fungi
|
rocks
|
Question: What has a water vascular system with tube feet?
Facts: Blastoids have a unique water vascular system with tube feet.
Choices: (A) humans, (B) blastoids, (C) bushes, (D) orchids, (E) Most plants, (F) ferns, (G) bacteria, (H) the Sun
|
blastoids
|
Question: What is an example of an echinoderm?
Facts: Starfish are an echinoderm with a unique water vascular system.
Choices: (A) a fish, (B) eel, (C) starfish, (D) parasites, (E) ferns, (F) shark, (G) fertile, (H) algae
|
starfish
|
Question: What kind of animals has a water vascular system with tubed feet?
Facts: Starfish have a unique water vascular system with tube feet.
Choices: (A) animals, (B) starfish, (C) reeds, (D) insects, (E) warm-blooded, (F) sponges, (G) sea coral, (H) four limbs
|
starfish
|
Question: What kind of feet do echinoids have?
Facts: echinoids have tube feet
Choices: (A) tube, (B) long, (C) warm, (D) webbed, (E) arched, (F) edible, (G) muscle, (H) flat
|
tube
|
Question: How do echinoderms use their feet to locomote themselves?
Facts: Echinoderms have a hydraulic system of locomotion with tube feet.
Choices: (A) one at a time, (B) to move people, (C) running and lifting, (D) protein channels, (E) a hydraulic system, (F) it needs them, (G) undulations, (H) It helps them survive
|
a hydraulic system
|
Question: What phylum do starfish belong to?
Facts: Starfish are echinoderms.
Choices: (A) fertile, (B) animals, (C) Echinoderm., (D) Mollusca., (E) Sponge., (F) Absorb light, (G) Annelid., (H) a fish
|
Echinoderm.
|
Question: Where does a starfish have its water vascular system?
Facts: Each starfish arm contains part of the water vascular system.
Choices: (A) salt and water., (B) Chlorophyll, (C) the environment, (D) in its arms, (E) on the rocks, (F) in its eyes, (G) Epidermis, (H) in the ocean
|
in its arms
|
Question: What can have a water vascular system with tube feet?
Facts: deuterostomes can have a water vascular system with tube feet.
Choices: (A) ducks, (B) peachleaf willow, (C) cats, (D) orchids, (E) Most plants, (F) horses, (G) animals, (H) deuterostomes
|
deuterostomes
|
Question: what have a unique water vascular system with tube feet?
Facts: sea urchins have a unique water vascular system with tube feet
Choices: (A) h2o, (B) insects, (C) sea urchins, (D) bushes, (E) Most plants, (F) Conifers, (G) orchids, (H) humans
|
sea urchins
|
Question: Sea stars use a unique water vascular system with what?
Facts: Sea stars use a unique water vascular system with feet
Choices: (A) growth, (B) a ray, (C) feet, (D) oxygen, (E) porous, (F) energy, (G) Light, (H) volume
|
feet
|
Question: Which has a unique water vascular system?
Facts: Echinoids have unique water vascular system was tube feet.
Choices: (A) roots, (B) trees, (C) Conifers, (D) Echinoids, (E) fur seals, (F) Most plants, (G) ferns, (H) bushes
|
Echinoids
|
Question: a connection is between the eye and what type of feet in echinoderms
Facts: a connection is between the eye and tube feet in echinoderms
Choices: (A) tube, (B) Seesaw, (C) vision, (D) made, (E) voles, (F) a path, (G) bones, (H) muscle
|
tube
|
Question: What is the average weather in Indonesia?
Facts: The average weather in Indonesia is tropical
Choices: (A) Summer, (B) Windy, (C) complex, (D) mild, (E) Dry, (F) Tropical, (G) Cold, (H) temperature
|
Tropical
|
Question: To learn more about the average weather, it is essential to:
Facts: It is essential to observe the average weather in one place over time.
Choices: (A) staying warm, (B) observe it, (C) argue about it, (D) ignore it, (E) survive, (F) temperature, (G) A computer, (H) write about it
|
observe it
|
Question: What is Jordan's average weather over time?
Facts: Jordan's average weather over time is dry and hot
Choices: (A) coldest season, (B) non-existant, (C) autumn, (D) temperature, (E) dry and hot, (F) snowing, (G) Winter, (H) nighttime 24/7
|
dry and hot
|
Question: Climate can be annalyzed with
Facts: Climate can be annalyzed with satellite
Choices: (A) sphygmomanometer, (B) scattered light, (C) seasons, (D) heat or cold, (E) seismometers, (F) satellites, (G) Water expanding, (H) nanometers
|
satellites
|
Question: What depends on the climate in an area?
Facts: Bloom time depends on the climate in an area
Choices: (A) school time, (B) root growth, (C) eating dinner, (D) bloom time, (E) seasons, (F) Animal survival, (G) planting trees, (H) energy usage
|
bloom time
|
Question: climate is the average what over a long period of time?
Facts: climate is the average circulation of the Earth's atmosphere over a long period of time
Choices: (A) Earth's atmosphere circulation, (B) By wind and rain, (C) heat and pressure, (D) bacteria, (E) Temperature changing, (F) Earth's density, (G) characteristics, (H) gravity
|
Earth's atmosphere circulation
|
Question: Climate is the average of things like what in an area over a long period of time
Facts: Climate is the average of things like rain or sun shine in an area over a long period of time
Choices: (A) earthquake activity, (B) native species, (C) temperature, (D) biological diversity, (E) rain or sun shine, (F) the environment, (G) food web, (H) vegetation
|
rain or sun shine
|
Question: what looks at long-term averages in an area over a long period of time?
Facts: Climate looks at long-term averages in an area over a long period of time
Choices: (A) habitat, (B) Winter, (C) mild, (D) weather, (E) seasons, (F) three, (G) climate, (H) atmosphere
|
climate
|
Question: What is the average weather in Taiwan over a long period of time?
Facts: the average weather in Taiwan over a long period of time is subtropical
Choices: (A) nonexistent, (B) coldest season, (C) Winter, (D) arctic, (E) Summer, (F) subtropical, (G) seasons, (H) snowy
|
subtropical
|
Question: The average weather in an area during an era is called:
Facts: Climate is the average weather in an area during an era.
Choices: (A) Summer, (B) epoch, (C) good, (D) autumn, (E) time period, (F) mild, (G) Pleistocein, (H) climate
|
climate
|
Question: What is the average weather in a place over time?
Facts: Climate is the average weather in a place over a long period of time.
Choices: (A) mild, (B) Summer, (C) deserts, (D) acclimate, (E) seasons, (F) climate, (G) temperature, (H) climatic
|
climate
|
Question: Loud noises can cause animals to what?
Facts: Loud noises can cause animals to run away.
Choices: (A) run away, (B) look for food, (C) started, (D) get started, (E) threatened, (F) Heart rate, (G) take a bath, (H) go to sleep
|
run away
|
Question: What could cause an animal to startle?
Facts: firecrackers can cause animals to startle
Choices: (A) Firecrackers, (B) Going into hibernation, (C) an object, (D) Electrical energy, (E) an electric stove, (F) Gathering food, (G) Seeing prey, (H) vehicles
|
Firecrackers
|
Question: What can startle animals?
Facts: engines can cause animals to startle
Choices: (A) pigeons, (B) Electrical, (C) Frogs, (D) nothing, (E) sunset, (F) Movement, (G) engines, (H) sunrise
|
engines
|
Question: what can cause animals to startle?
Facts: thunder can cause animals to startle
Choices: (A) Electrical, (B) thunder, (C) sleeping, (D) rapid breathing, (E) dogs, (F) influenza, (G) vehicles, (H) Pollution
|
thunder
|
Question: what can animals be startled by?
Facts: animals can be startled by sudden movement
Choices: (A) murmur, (B) reflexes, (C) vehicles, (D) movement, (E) rain, (F) photons, (G) waves, (H) an object
|
movement
|
End of preview. Expand
in Data Studio
README.md exists but content is empty.
- Downloads last month
- 5