Slither, eat, digest, hunt, and much much more.
It depends on how fast the snake grows. If a snake is growing quickly, it will shed more. If a snake is growing slowly, it won't shed as often.
You stay very still and slowly back away from the snake. If the snake follows you dont react too quickly- its stresses and scares the snake.
the snake meandered across the grass very slowly so the bird could not hear the snake slithering.
The (article) snake (noun) moved (verb) slowly (adverb) through the grass (prepositional phrase).This sentence doesn't have an adjective, because an adjective describes a noun, pronoun, or other adjective.If you said "The snake moved slowly through the green grass," green would be the adjective because it is describing the word, "grass", which is a noun.
i use the "cheat engine" and "speed hack" "0.3" - "0.5" then play snake and its slowly mode :) it takes time a lot but it is cool ! = )
Yes. More specifically, this is an example of consonantal alliteration or consonance.
Yes. The snake digests each meal by passing it along its body slowly. As long as the first meal is near the end of its body and almost digested, the snake can eat another meal.
Yes. Now look down from the screen and back away slowly.
Snakes do have a stomach. They do not have a diaphragm. However, their stomach is right under the esophagus. These are both highly stretchable on the snake, this is how they are able to eat things that are larger than they are.
corn snakes are very docile reptiles and are usually very calm and just slowly slither around smoothly :)
Jack rabbits are faster since they got strong legs. Snakes just crawl slowly.
Simile: "I, like a second comer, waiting," "looked around like a God."Alliteration: "Must wait, must stand and wait," "and slowly, very slowly."Onomatopoeia: 'clatter', etc