If you mean the rabbit travels half a mile an hour, then assuming the turtle barely moves in that hour, it will take just over 2 hours to be neck and neck.
If you mean the rabbit halves the distance between them every hour, the rabbit will never be exactly level, but will get forever closer.
To determine how long it will take the rabbit to catch up to the turtle, we first calculate the turtle's time to cover the 7-kilometer head start at its speed of 2 kilometers per hour. The turtle will take 3.5 hours (7 km ÷ 2 km/h) to reach the finish line. Meanwhile, the rabbit runs at 7 kilometers per hour, meaning it will take the rabbit 1 hour to cover the same distance. The rabbit will catch up to the turtle in 1 hour, as it will have covered 7 kilometers while the turtle is still running.
The distance between the two creatures is 7 km The difference in speed is 7 km/h - 2 km/h = 5 km/h The distance between them (7 km) will be covered at 5 km/h in: time = distance/speed = 7 km / 5 km/h = 1.4 hours 1 hour = 60 mins 0.4 hr = 0.4 × 60 min = 24 min → 1.4 hr = 1 hr 24 min.
Oh, dude, catching a rabbit is like trying to catch a greased-up pig at a county fair - it's not easy! In this context, "catch the rabbit" is just a playful way of saying "get the job done" or "achieve your goal." So, like, go out there and catch that rabbit, or whatever.
Play catch with it
A rabbit zigzags because it is harder for the predator to catch it.
Only rabbits can catch myxomatosis. Humans and other animals cannot catch it from eating the meat of an affected rabbit.
No
Yes
With a net.
yes
Catch it in a lake
You shouldn't catch a turtle for a pet, you should buy one bred in captivity. It's better for the turtle.