Endoskeleton.
No, endo-meaning inside.
exoskeleton. Exoskeleton is having like a "shell" on the outside of the body instead of inside.
they don't have a skeleton like we do, they are invertabrates meaning they don'thave a back bone. they have an exoskeleton that is like a shell on the out side of their body.
A grasshopper has an exoskeleton, meaning having its skeleton outside the body.
they have exoskeleton
Molting, or in Latin, ecdysis (meaning 'to strip'!).
No, all birds are vertebrates, meaning that they have an internal skeleton just like you and me.
The body covering of an insect is called an exoskeleton. Meaning that their skeleton is external or on the outside. As they grow insects shed their old exoskeleton when a new one forms. The new exoskeleton however is softer and at this time the insect is most vulnerable, that is until the new one hardens.
Yes; many cnidarians have an exoskeleton.
It's called an "exoskeleton," exo meaning "outside." Humans and many other mammals, avians, reptiles and amphibians have "endoskeletons," endo meaning "inside."
Ostriches, like all other birds and indeed, like all other vertebrates, have an endoskeleton, meaning an internal skeleton, rather than an exoskeleton or shell. Insects have exoskeletons. Birds don't.