英語怎麼介紹熊
❶ 熊用英語怎麼說
熊用英語表達:bear
1、Thereareallsortsofanimals,includingbears,pigs,kangaroos,andpenguins.
有各種各樣的動物,包括熊、豬、袋鼠和企鵝。
2、.
尼安德特人能夠捕殺渾身覆毛的猛獁象和熊。
3、Bearsoftenhibernateincaves.
熊常在山洞裡冬眠。
4、.
波莉正在玩她的泰迪熊。
5、.
母熊往往會在洞穴里墊些樹葉或草。
動物的英文:animal
1、Thereareallsortsofanimals,includingbears,pigs,kangaroos,andpenguins .
有各種各樣的動物,包括熊、豬、袋鼠和企鵝。
2、.
他們希望這些雄性動物可以和野生的雌性動物交配。
3、.
我可以向你保證動物們得到了精心照顧。
4、Don'tyouthinkit'scrueltocageacreatureup?
你不認為把動物關進籠里太殘忍了嗎?
❷ 我是熊維薇怎麼介紹自己要用英語。
My name is xu wei wei,英語的名字就是要用這種稱呼叫。
❸ 請給我一些熊的英文簡介!
Etymology
Modern English "bear" derives from Old English "bera", which itself derives from Proto-Germanic "*beron" meaning "the brown one". (Compare Scandinavian "björn", Dutch "beer" and German "Bär" all meaning "bear").
Both Greek ("arktos") and Latin ("ursus") have retained the Proto-Indo-European root word for "bear" ("*rtko") but it was ritually replaced in the northern branches of the Indo-European languages (The Germanic, Baltic, Celtic and Slavic branches) because of the hunters' taboo on the names of wild animals. For example the Irish word for "bear" translated means "the good calf", in Welsh it translates as "honey-pig", in Lithuanian it means "the licker" and Russian "медведь" literally means "one who leads to honey".
[edit] Physical attributes
Common characteristics of bears include a short tail, acute senses of smell and hearing, five non-retractable claws per paw, and long, dense, shaggy fur.
Bears have large bodies and powerful limbs. They are capable of standing up on their hind legs. They have broad paws, long snouts, and round ears. Their teeth are bared for defense and used as tools, depending on the diet of the bear. Their claws are used for ripping, digging, and catching. Black bears, and likely other bears, have color vision.
Depending on the species, bears can have 32 to 42 teeth. Bear teeth are not specialized for killing their prey like those of cats. Normal canine teeth in a carnivore are generally large, pointed and used for killing prey, while bears' canine teeth are relatively small and typically used in defense or as tools. Bears' molar teeth are broad, flat and are used to shred and grind plant food into small digestible pieces.
Bears have four limbs that end in paws. Each paw has five long, sharp claws that are not retractable. These claws can be used to climb trees, rip open termite nests and beehives, dig up roots, or catch prey, depending on the species. While most carnivores tend to walk on their toes in a way that is adapted for speed, bears have a plantigrade stance. They walk with their weight on the soles of their feet, with the heel touching the ground, while the claws of the arm are used more for balance. Although slower than most carnivores, a running bear can reach speeds of up to 50 km/h (30 mph).
A bear's fur is often long and shaggy. Fur color varies among species, ranging from white, blond or cream, black and white, to all black or all brown. Colors of a bear's fur can also vary within species. For example, American black bears may be black, brown, reddish-brown, or bluish-black. Several species, such as the sun bear and spectacled bear have a light-colored chest with facial markings.
In all bear species, males are larger than females, but the difference between sexes varies and is greatest in the largest species. Large male polar bears may weigh twice as much as females, while smaller male and female bears are much more similar in weight. A bear's life span seems to last about 25 to 40 years. Bears living in the wild tend to die younger than their zoo counterparts.
Kodiak bears are the largest type, and in fact one of the largest extant carnivores, though polar bears are the heaviest. Sun bears are the smallest, only the size of a large dog.
[edit] Habitats
Bears live in a variety of habitats from the tropics to the Arctic and from forests to snowfields. They are mainly omnivorous, although some have a more specialized diet, such as polar bears who mainly consume fish and marine mammalia. They eat lichens, roots, nuts, and berries. They can also go to a river or other body of water to capture fish. Bears will commonly travel far for food. Hunting times are usually in the sk or the dawn except when humans are nearby.
[edit] Behavior
Bears generally lead solitary lives, except for mothers attending their cubs, or males and females ring mating season. Bears form temporary groups only when food is plentiful in a small area. Alaskan brown bears group in the same area to feed on salmon ring the annual salmon runs, when the fish swim upriver to reach their spawning grounds. Other bears may live alone but exist in a social network. A male and female may live in an overlapping home range, each defending their range from other bears of the same sex. Male young usually leave their mothers to live in other areas, but females often live in an area that overlaps that of their mother.
Bears travel over large territories in search of food, remembering the details of the landscape they cover. They use their excellent memories to return to locations where food was plentiful in past years or seasons. Most bears are able to climb trees to chase prey or gain access to additional vegetation. The only exceptions are polar bears and large alt brown bears, whose heavy weight makes it difficult to climb trees.
Some of the larger species, such as the polar bear and the grizzly bear, are dangerous to humans, especially in areas where they have become used to people. For the most part, bears are shy and are easily frightened of humans. They will, however, defend their cubs ferociously if a situation calls for it.
[edit] Reproctive behavior
The bear's courtship period is very brief. Bears reproce seasonally, usually after a period of inactivity similar to hibernation. Cubs are born toothless, blind, and bald. The cubs of brown bears, usually born in litters of 1–3, will typically stay with the mother for two full seasons. They feed on their mother's milk through the ration of their relationship with their mother, although as the cubs continue to grow, nursing becomes less frequent and learn to begin hunting with the mother. They will remain with the mother for approximately three years, until she enters the next cycle of estrus and drives the cubs off. Bears will reach sexual maturity in five to seven years. Bears are generally solitary creatures and will not stay close together for long periods of time. Exceptions have been regularly observed; siblings recently on their own, and sub-alt bears of similar age and status will spend a significant amount of time in informal social groups.
[edit] Other
Many bears of northern regions are assumed to hibernate in the winter. While many bear species do go into a physiological state called hibernation or winter sleep, it is not true hibernation. In true hibernators, body temperatures drop to near ambient and heart rate slows drastically, but the animals periodically rouse themselves to urinate or defecate and to eat from stored food. The body temperature of bears, on the other hand, drops only a few degrees from normal and heart rate slows only slightly. They do not wake normally ring this "hibernation", and therefore do not eat, drink, urinate or defecate the entire period. Higher body heat and being easily roused may be adaptations, because females give birth to their cubs ring this winter sleep.
Laws have been passed in many areas of the world to protect bears from hunters or habitat destruction. Bears in captivity have been forced to be trained to dance, box, or ride bicycles; however, this use of the animals became controversial in the late 20th century. In cartoons, circus bears are frequently depicted riding unicycles.
The brown bear is Finland's national animal. In the United States, the black bear is the state animal of Louisiana, New Mexico, and West Virginia; the grizzly bear is the state animal of both Montana and California.
The constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor represent bears.
[edit] Bears as food and medicine
Many people enjoy hunting bears and eating them. Their meat is dark and stringy, like a tough cut of beef. In Cantonese cuisine, bear paws are considered a delicacy. The peoples of China, Japan, and Korea use bears' body parts and secretions (notably their gallbladders and bile) as part of traditional Chinese medicine. Thousands of bile bears are farmed for their bile in China and Vietnam.
❹ 怎樣用英語介紹北極熊
Polar Bears and Conservation
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Click image to enlarge.
Polar Bear Status Report
Polar bears are a potentially threatened (not endangered) species living in the circumpolar north. They are animals which know no boundaries. They pad across the ice from Russia to Alaska, from Canada to Greenland and onto Norway's Svalbard archipelago. No adequate census exists on which to base a worldwide population estimate, but biologists use a working figure of perhaps 22,000 to 25,000 bears with about sixty percent of those living in Canada.
In most sections of the Arctic where estimates are available, polar bear populations are thought to be stable at present. Counts have been decreasing in Baffin Bay and the Davis Strait, where about 3,600 bears are thought to live, but are increasing in the Beaufort Sea, where there are around 3,000 bears.
In the 1960s and 1970s, polar bears were under such severe survival pressure that a landmark international accord was reached, despite the tensions and suspicions of the Cold War. The International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears was signed in Oslo, November 15, 1973 by the five nations with polar bear populations (Canada, Denmark which governed Greenland at that time, Norway, the U.S., and the former U.S.S.R.).
The polar bear nations agreed to prohibit random, unregulated sport hunting of polar bears and to outlaw hunting the bears from aircraft and icebreakers as had been common practice. The agreement also obliges each nation to protect polar bear denning areas and migration patterns and to conct research relating to the conservation and management of polar bears. Finally, the nations must share their polar bear research findings with each other. Member scientists of the Polar Bear Specialist Group meet every three to four years under the auspices of the IUCN World Conservation Union to coordinate their research on polar bears throughout the Arctic.
With the agreement in force, polar bear populations slowly recovered. The Oslo agreement is one of the first and most successful international conservation measures enacted in the 21st century.
❺ 熊的英語怎麼寫
bear n. 熊
❻ 熊用英文怎麼寫
1、熊(英語:Bear)即熊科(學名:Ursidae)動物的通稱,是一種大型哺乳類,屬於食肉目。該科共有六屬八種,廣泛分布於北半球和南半球的一部分地區。
2、棕熊(英語:brown bear)是一種極為龐大的熊,古稱羆,體重可達130–700公斤(300–1500磅)。
3、北極熊(英語:polar bear),在不同的語言中又稱為白熊或冰熊,被全世界公認是北極地區最具代表性的動物,可能是六十多萬年前(也有不同的科學家認為是十五、二十、四十、甚至上百萬年前),由灰熊演化出來。
4、亞洲黑熊(英語:Asian black bear)是食肉目熊科的哺乳動物。胸部有白色新月形斑紋,又稱為月熊、月牙熊、狗熊,別名黑瞎子。
5、美洲黑熊(英語:American black bear),是生存於北美洲的一種熊科熊屬的動物。分布范圍除從阿拉斯加南部一直到墨西哥北部,包括了美國39個州和的加拿大除愛德華王子島的所有省份。
6、大熊貓(英語:panda),也稱作大貓熊,一般稱為「熊貓」或「貓熊」,屬於食肉目熊科的一種哺乳動物,體色為黑白兩色。熊貓是中國特有物種。
7、眼鏡熊(英語:spectacled bear),也叫安第斯熊,是南美洲特產的一種熊科動物,當地人稱為「朱庫馬利」(艾馬拉語)。它是南美唯一的一種熊,也是最後一種短臉熊(這種面部結構被認為主要食肉,不過現在眼鏡熊偏好草食)。
8、懶熊(英語:sloth bear)分布於印度、斯里蘭卡、巴基斯坦、不丹、尼泊爾、孟加拉,是生活在低地的哺乳動物。
9、馬來熊(英語:sun bear),英文名為「Sun Bear」,藏語譯音為「耐力喀蘇」,是熊科馬來熊屬(Helarctos)的唯一一種生物,生活在東南亞的熱帶雨林中