I think you mean echidna (an animal much like a small porcupine).
Are they pugnacious? That means are they aggressive and hot-tempered and easily provoked to a fight. I honestly don't know, but I doubt it. All those spines probably protect it well enough that it doesn't need to argue much. It just curls up in a ball and lets its opponent wear himself out on the spines.
Brown and tannish brown
you're so pugnacious.
Someone who is pugnacious is always ready to quarrel or start a fight. The President was in a pugnacious mood when he spoke to journalists about the rebellion. The professor had been pugnacious and irritable. When he drank too much, he'd become quite pugnacious.
No, Because pugnacious is opposite of peaceful.
There is not a prefix in the word Pugnacious, but there is a suffix and the suffix is ous.
Echinoderms only live in oceans.
He was very pugnacious when anyone started talking about politics. Pugnacious is a word used to describe someone who is quick to argue.
It is unlikely for someone who is quiet and peaceful to also be pugnacious, which means inclined to be combative or quick to argue. However, it is possible for them to display assertiveness in certain situations while still maintaining their overall gentle demeanor.
I've never heard of the word, "pugnacious." The young student's "quick to fight" nature was described as overly pugnacious to the school's principal by the child's teacher .
Pugnacious means inclined to quarrel or fight readily; quarrelsome; belligerent; combative, so a sentence with context clues of the word pugnacious could be: Walt's pugnacious behavior made his opponent back down.
The Latin root word "pug" means "to fight." You may find this root utilized in many English words today such as pugnacious, repugnant, and impugn.
Bilbies are not pugnacious. They do not fight with their own kind. Although solitary, they often live in small colonies, and share a network of tunnels.