Typically found in the bathroom?
jacuzzi?
fealola - you got it. i knew you would...
lives in the waters or on land?
eastern hemisphere?
is it furry?
bigger than a breadbox?
ANIMAL:
Not a person
Lives mostly on land
Lives in all Hemispheres
Not furry
Comes in differents sizes, with smallest breed adult fitting snugly in my breadbox.
15 questions to go
fealola wrote:Comes in differents sizes, with smallest breed adult fitting snugly in my breadbox.
Do I understand this to mean that the smallest adults are about the size of a breadbox?
Well, there are different varieties of this animal. Each variety is a different size. The adult of the smallest variety or breed of this animal would probably fit very snugly in my wooden Ikea breadbox. So yes. The smallest adults are roughly the size of a breadbox. (Babies would be alot smaller, of course.)
ANIMAL:
Has feathers
# Lives mostly on land
# Lives in all Hemispheres
# Comes in differents sizes, with smallest breed adult fitting snugly in my breadbox.
#There are different varieties of this animal. Each variety is a different size. The adult of the smallest variety or breed of this animal would probably fit very snugly in my wooden Ikea breadbox. The smallest adults are roughly the size of a breadbox. (Babies would be alot smaller, of course.)
14 questions to go
ANIMAL:
Can't fly
# Has feathers
# Lives mostly on land
# Lives in all Hemispheres
# Comes in differents sizes, with smallest breed adult fitting snugly in my breadbox.
#There are different varieties of this animal. Each variety is a different size. The adult of the smallest variety or breed of this animal would probably fit very snugly in my wooden Ikea breadbox. The smallest adults are roughly the size of a breadbox. (Babies would be alot smaller, of course.)
13 questions to go
I don't think you're going to find feathers on a penguin, Mac.
If they're birds, don't they have feathers?
And I hope we're not talking about chickens, because they are certainly capable of flight.
i thought chickens were flightless
This non-flight business bothers me. I was going to say guinea hen, but, they too are capable of flight. Are we to assume that this is a strictly perambulatory bird that doesn't, under any circumstances take to the air?
A sort of modern day Dodo bird?
Puzzling.