A weasel would likely win a fight between them and a shrew. The reason for this is because a weasel has teeth that are incredibly sharp and can tear flesh open.
The shrew would win hands down, theyre poisonous and deadly fast
The snake would be the predator and the shrew would be the prey
because shrew means a woman of violent temper and speech (a mean lady) the antonym would be a nice woman.
Well yes in a rare occasion a lynx would eat weasels, raccoons, and even minks. If the lynx is hungry and the weasel is available for it to eat.
bear
The shrew would win hands down, theyre poisonous and deadly fast
It is likely that a shrew would win because some varieties have a bite that spreads venomous saliva which immobilises their prey - usually much smaller creatures like mice and frogs.
The snake would be the predator and the shrew would be the prey
a wolverine clearly it is much larger and much stronger a wolverine because it is bigger and more vicious
I think the pygmy shrew would be the second smallest, but I can't seem to find the smallest shrew. Sorry.
It is not a likely situation that a weasel will attack a housecat, though if the cat was the aggressor, the weasel would fight back against it, fiercely. The other factor is that a cat, if it is losing the fight, could easily run away and climb out of reach. However, a weasel could still injure a cat enough to kill it by biting hard, causing tears and ruptures as the cat tries to disengage it.
The shrew would not stop complaining to me. After two years of marriage, he left his shrew of a wife and went to sea.
yes
Absolutely.
because shrew means a woman of violent temper and speech (a mean lady) the antonym would be a nice woman.
This fight would never happen, no matter how you look at it.
No. Rabbits are normally gentle creatures, as well as strict vegetarians...