It is thought that millions of years ago, fish were able to walk on land, and they became adapted to swim over years, as their legs become fins
Large fish swim swiftly in the sea.Adjective noun verb adverb preposition article noun. The parts of speech for the sentence are:Large = adjective describing the noun fish.fish = is a noun, the subject of the sentence.swim = verbswiftly = adverb modifying the verb swim.sea = noun, object of the preposition in.in the sea = adverbial prepositional phrase, modifying the verb swim.
The parts of speech for the sentence are:Large = adjective describing the noun fish.fish = is a noun, the subject of the sentence.swim = verbswiftly = adverb modifying the verb swim.sea = noun, object of the preposition in.in the sea = adverbial prepositional phrase, modifying the verb swim.
a fish can swim in the water for ever but a human cant
If you swim beyond that rock you will be in the open sea.
That is the correct spelling of the plural "fins" (swim aids, or those of fish).
Salmon swim in the sea. Salmon are fish. Fish love water. The sea is water. Thus, salmon swim in the sea. Voila!
Trout cannot swim at sea.
Sea Turtles swim in the sea because they eat fish.
Freshwater fish.
yes they do
No they can't because they need to have salt in the water. So no sea fish cannot swim in the river.
Queer Fish That Swim in the Sea - 1898 was released on: USA: September 1898
Yes, a seahorse is a type of fish and it does swim.
There are certainly aquatic animals that can't swim, such as the clam, or the adult barnacle (and even then, the larval form of the barnacle does swim) but you wouldn't really call anything a fish if it couldn't swim. Fish swim.
yes they do
Freshwater fish would not survive the salinity of the sea for very long.
no fish swims upright unless its xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx kaveer999: the only fish to swim upright is the sea horse.