kangaroos in English

noun
1
a large plant-eating marsupial with a long powerful tail and strongly developed hind limbs that enable it to travel by leaping, found only in Australia and New Guinea.
In the wild, its main food supply consists of small wallabies and kangaroos , birds, lizards and probably frogs and crayfish.

Use "kangaroos" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "kangaroos" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "kangaroos", or refer to the context using the word "kangaroos" in the English Dictionary.

1. Kangaroos are diurnal animals.

2. Australia is the hometown of kangaroos.

3. Kangaroos are indigenous to Australia.

4. Only female kangaroos have pouches.

5. Marsupials include koalas, possums and kangaroos.

6. Kangaroos are not as docile as they look.

7. Kangaroos carry their young in a pouch.

8. Koala bears and Kangaroos are the most common marsupials.

9. There are far more kangaroos per square mile than humans.

10. 15 Kangaroos can sustain high speeds over long distances.

11. In unfavorable conditions, female kangaroos can pause their pregnancies.

12. Female kangaroos carry their young in pouches that are external to their bodies.

13. Owls, kangaroos, cats, dogs, and humans are examples of Altricial species

14. Wallabies are marsupial mammals like kangaroos and eat diets high in vegetation.

15. 2020 Kangaroos, koalas, Tasmanian devils, dingoes, jumping spiders and wild Budgies are featured in the

16. Along the way, we saw several kangaroos, their twitching ears alert to our presence.

17. Kangaroos compete with sheep and cattle for sparse supplies of food and water.

18. Most animals are not Bipeds, but mammals that are include kangaroos and some primates

19. The immigrants harvested seaweed for the journey and ate kangaroos and wombats en route.

20. “It is as though kangaroos are hopping on pairs of coiled springs,” says Proske.

21. 18 Tee off on one of Canberra's outstanding golf courses, where kangaroos laze in the grass while you play.

22. In a Bushfire, animals such as kangaroos, wallabies, emus and deer run and jump to escape the flames

23. Australians don’t drink Fosters, wear crocodile-tooth hats or hop around in a kangaroos’ pouch… but there are some stereotypes about Aussies that are true

24. Bandicoots are roughly similar in appearance to rats but have elongated snouts with forelegs that are shorter than their hind legs, and have elongated feet like kangaroos

25. Many marsupials, for example, are born naked or blind; baby kangaroos are perhaps one of the more outstanding examples of an Altricial animal, as they are born in a form which borders on

26. Mammals of the desert include the southern hairy-nosed wombat which shelters from the hot sun by burrowing into the sands, as well as typical desert animals such as red kangaroos and dingoes.

27. Kangaroo - Kangaroo - Behaviour: Kangaroos have an irregular activity rhythm; generally, they are active at night and during periods of low light, but it is quite possible to find them out in the open in bright sunlight

28. ‘A Wroughton family are swapping their Cagoules for koalas and kangaroos by moving to Australia next year.’ ‘I wonder if they can be trained to chase ramblers in their ridiculous coloured Cagoules, and look for food under caravans.’

29. Much to the distress of his neighbours, the list of animals grew to include two wombats, owls, kangaroos, wallabies, a deer, armadillos, parakeets, peacocks, a racoon, a Canadian marmot or woodchuck, a Japanese salamander, two laughing jackasses and a zebu or small Brahminee bull

30. Have you ever seen the crowd goin' Apeshit? (Offset) [Verse 2: JAY-Z & Beyoncé] I'm a gorilla in the fuckin' coop, finna pull up in the zoo I'm like Chief Keef meet Rafiki, who been Lion King to you Pocket watch it like kangaroos, tell these clowns we ain't amused Banana clips for …

31. If we look across many, many different species of animals, not just us primates, but also including other mammals, birds, even marsupials like kangaroos and wombats, it turns out that there's a relationship between how long a childhood a species has and how big their brains are compared to their bodies and how smart and flexible they are.