It's all coming back to me!
A skunk would call her long distance.
A skunk.
You'd get a porcupine and skunk in new jersey! I know it's dumb...
With the use of a large stick or similar
Elizabethan English word for taste is the same as modern English. It hasn't changed.
'Skunk' translates to 'Stinkdier' in Dutch.
The Spanish word for "squirrel" is "ardilla".
Moufette
Getsmellseen
wind is created
"well becuase there was a queen backk in the england in thee olden days i should put it, and how to say stinky or smelly i should say, is skunk in england." "So they called her smelly from that day on and the skunk got its name from her." and , "that is how the skunk got its name." good story , yes yes it is
U-Reek-Ah hahaha get it?
臭鼬/Chòu yòu
no
Odor in the Court (get it? hehe)
The cast of Then the Wind Changed - 2012 includes: Celeste Geer as herself
If you ever plan on chasing a skunk, this might be very useful. Let's say that you're a few feet away from the skunk when it sprays you. There's no wind and you are not immediately in range of the skunk's spray. Regardless, the odor will still reach you even if both you and the skunk do absolutely nothing. It's all diffusion. The skunk's spray starts as a liquid, but rapidly evaporates into the surrounding air. Those particles disperse and collide with air particles, but will inevitably get further and further from the skunk. Eventually, you'll notice because those particles have now reached your nose. The particles of skunk collide with an enormous number of air particles per second, and it takes quite a bit of time to reach you, but the idea is that particles will eventually spread out from the source until they are somewhat evenly dispersed. Think of it as that time someone breaks wind in a classroom and everyone smells it, but doesn't know where it came from. So if none of the spray lands on you, can you try to outrun the diffusion of the spray? Yes you should!