Chipmunk
armadillo
Traders is an English equivalent of 'Ottawa'. The noun comes from the Algonquin language speakers of Canada's Native Americans. The people's name also may be found spelled as 'Odawa' and 'Odaawaa'.
Here Comes the Indian was created on 2003-06-17.
The first thought that comes to mind is that he should have dodged in a different direction.
The common name originally may have been spelled "chitmunk," from the native Odawa word jidmoonh, meaning "red squirrel". The earliest form cited in the Oxford English Dictionary is "chipmonk," however, "chipmunk" appears in several books from the 1820s and 1830s.
First of all, it depends on the rodent. What makes all rodents rodents is their teeth, which they can definitely use to defend themselves. Rodents also usually have claws on their feet that they can use, and many have excellent hearing and smell so that they can flee easily, plus many will pee, barf, or poop if it comes to it. Some rodents have specialized defenses for specialized predators, but those are fewer and farther between than the ones I have said already.
No. Ceylon tea comes from Ceylon, Indian tea comes from India. Althoug they are the same genus, they are different species.
elephants come in african and indian varieties you can get african elephants and indian elephants.
They are rodents, known for their continuously growing incisors. Rodents include species like mice, rats, squirrels, and beavers, all of which have to gnaw to keep their teeth from overgrowing.
Reindeer ------------------------ The word caribou comes from a Micmac Indian word for "snowshoveler."
Well, one whose scientific name, Didelphis virginianus, means that it comes from Virginia, is the opposum.
The first animal that comes out of my mind is squirrel. They don't actually fly, but they can glide.