Masculine is a common example. It contains the word male (masculine.)
No. Kangaroo is not a compound word.
There is no Hawaiian word for kangaroo, just as there is no English word for Kangaroo.
the slang word for kangaroo is 'roo'! LOL IT SOUNDS FUNNY!
You could use "marsupial" but that applies to other animals as well. To refer to something as "of or like" a kangaroo, you would use the word kangaroo as an adjunct noun (kangaroo fur) or possessive (kangaroo's pouch).
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When I was at the zoo I saw a Kangaroo jump past me!
The kangaroo is a marsupial.
No. Kangaroo is not a compound word.
There is no Hawaiian word for kangaroo, just as there is no English word for Kangaroo.
Yes. The word "kangaroo" is believed to have come from the Aboriginal word gangurru, a Guugu Yimidhirr word referring to the Grey Kangaroo.
One example of an English word that does not have African roots or origins is "kangaroo." Kangaroos are native to Australia, and the word "kangaroo" is believed to have originated from the Guugu Yimithirr word "gangurru," which was the name of the Grey Kangaroo in that Indigenous Australian language.
the slang word for kangaroo is 'roo'! LOL IT SOUNDS FUNNY!
kangaroo
Yes, kangaroo is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a mammal, a word for a thing.
You probably mean " foreign ". This word means not native to the environment, region or country. For example, a kangaroo would be foreign in Alaska or Siberia.
kangaroo
"Fair trial" would be an antonym to kangaroo court.