Match the Baby Animal to Its Mama Quiz
- Question: A fawn is a young…
- Answer: The linguistic origin of fawn meaning “a young deer” is different from that of fawn meaning “to court favor by a cringing or flattering manner.”
- Question: A joey is a young…
- Answer: Kangaroo offspring are perhaps the best-known joeys, but the term also applies to the young of other animals, such as koalas.
- Question: A kid is a young…
- Answer: Kid, meaning “a young goat,” dates back at least as far as the 13th century. Kid has also been used to mean “young human” for at least the past 300 years.
- Question: A gosling is a young…
- Answer: Gosling can mean “a foolish or callow person” as well as “a young goose.”
- Question: A foal is a young…
- Answer: Foal typically refers to a horse under one year old.
- Question: A kit is a young…
- Answer: A kit is “a young or undersized fur-bearing animal (such as a beaver, fox, or raccoon).”
- Question: A fledgling is a young…
- Answer: Fledglings are young birds that have fledged. Fledge means “to acquire the feathers necessary for flight or independent activity.”
- Question: A cygnet is a young…
- Answer: Cygnet can be traced back to kyknos, the Greek word for “swan.”
- Question: A nymph is a young…
- Answer: Mythological nymphs are minor divinities who dwell in nature. In the animal kingdom, nymphs are the larvae of certain insects, such as grasshoppers or mayflies.
- Question: A squab is a young…
- Answer: In addition to its use for “a young pigeon,” squab can also mean “couch” or “a cushion for a chair or couch.”
- Question: A pollywog is a young…
- Answer: Pollywog is synonymous with tadpole.
- Question: A poult is a young…
- Answer: Poult is defined as “a young fowl” but is most frequently used to describe young turkeys.
- Question: Nits are young…
- Answer: Nits refers to the eggs of lice and inspired the term nitpicking.
- Question: A calf is a young…
- Answer: Young cows are perhaps the most famous calves, but the term is also used for the offspring of various other large animals, such as elephants and whales.
- Question: A shoat is a young…
- Answer: Shoat shares linguistic roots with the noun shoot, referring to new growths like stems or branches.
- Question: A fingerling is a young…
- Answer: A fingerling is “a small fish especially up to one year of age.”
- Question: A pullet is a young…
- Answer: Pullet typically describes a domesticated hen less than a year old.
- Question: Its name deriving from the Spanish cría, meaning “rearing (of an animal), baby animal, litter,” a cria is a young…
- Answer: Baby llamas, alpacas, and vicuñas can all be called crias.
- Question: An eft is a young…
- Answer: Newts were once known as ewts; gradually, through a linguistic phenomenon sometimes called misdivision, “an ewt” became “a newt.” Ewt is derived from eft, which is still used today to describe newts that are in the land-dwelling portion of their life, before they reach maturity and return to aquatic living.
- Question: A spat is a young…
- Answer: In addition to oysters, spats can refer to other young bivalves, such as mussels or scallops.
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© Paul Farnfield/Dreamstime.com
© Paul Farnfield/Dreamstime.com