Have any questions?
[email protected]
English
Vietnamese
French
Spanish
Korean
Japanese
Thai
Chinese
Indonesian
Login
Signup
Contact
Login
Home
Elephants intertwine their trunks with the trunks of other elephants, much like a handshake.
Question 1:
Elephants intertwine their trunks with the trunks of other elephants, much like a handshake. What does an elephant not do with its trunk?
A.
caress a baby elephant
B.
drink through it like through a straw
C.
place food in their mouth
D.
grab enemies and fling them away
These questions are from this test. Would you like to take a practice test?
Trivial Practice Quiz animals - Test 33 | Englishfreetest.com
30 minutes
15 questions
Do test
Some questions from the same exam
How many fingers did the Tyrannosaurus rex have on its forelimbs?
The first evidence of herding behaviour among dinosaurs was discovered in 1878 in which part of the world?
Which one of these statements about the Seismosaurus, the Earth-shaking lizard, is wrong?
How long is the average lifespan of an elephant?
Just like humans, apes and dolphins, elephants can recognize themselves in a mirror.
Until what age can the female elephant (called a cow) produce offspring?
Elephants always give birth to twins.
Elephants express joy by spinning in circles, trumpeting, roaring, screaming, urinating, and flapping their ears. In which of these cases will an elephant not act this way?
Elephants sometimes have stillborn births, but are not bothered by the loss since the baby was never alive.
Mammoths are members of the elephant family.
How many species of elephant exist today?
How many individual muscles are in an elephants trunk?
When swimming, an elephant will use its trunk as a snorkel.
Elephants intertwine their trunks with the trunks of other elephants, much like a handshake. What does an elephant not do with its trunk?
Elephants spend 16 hours a day collecting and eating food, an average of 400 lbs of food a day. But their bodies do not digest 100% of the food. How much of the food does the elephants body digest?
Some other questions you may be interested in
This ancient-Greek structure had a single path running to and from the center, in 7 concentric rings. It was burned to the ground in the 15th century.
This is one of the few surviving relics of the Phrygian culture, which occupied the territory known today as Anatolia. The relic was used for religious ceremonies. It is generally considered that the reasons for its semi-destruction were major climatic cataclysms.
It was the most famous artistic work of ancient Greece. The statue was made of gold and ivory and presided over the Olympic games. The games were forbidden, accused of being pagan in the 5th century by Emperor Theodosius I. Later, the statue disappeared and its fate has been unknown since.
This great marble temple was built in Ephesus. It is famous for being one of the biggest temples the ancient Greeks ever built. It was burned by a madman, who wanted to immortalize his name.
This was the monumental marble tomb of the Anatolian king Mausolus. 140 feet high, it rivalled even the Egyptian pyramids.
These temples were built on the islands of Malta and Gozo earlier than the Egyptian pyramids and Stonehenge. They date from the Bronze Age - 3,600 BC.