
Can You Sing the Seven Days? Fun Days of the Week Songs and Activities!
Opening Introduction
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Opening Introduction
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Some animals walk forward. The lobster walks sideways. It moves with purpose across the ocean floor. It wears armor. It carries powerful claws. For ch ...
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Some animals grow their own shells. Others borrow shells from creatures that came before. The hermit crab does the latter. It carries its home on its ...
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Some animals swim through the ocean. Others attach themselves to rocks and never move again. The barnacle does the latter. It looks like a tiny white ...
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Some animals have brains. Some have muscles. The sponge has neither. It is one of the simplest animals on Earth. Yet it has survived for over 600 mill ...
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Some animals are admired for their beauty. Others are known for their speed. The sea cucumber is admired for something else. It cleans the ocean floor ...
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Some animals move fast. Others hide in shells. The sea urchin does something different. It moves slowly on tiny tube feet. It wears a suit of spines. ...
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Some animals run fast. Others hide well. The electric eel does something no other creature does quite the same way. It generates electricity. For chil ...
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Some fish rely on speed. Others depend on hiding. The porcupine fish takes a bolder approach. It transforms into a spiky, unswallowable ball. For chil ...
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Some fish swim fast to escape danger. Others hide in rocks. The pufferfish does something extraordinary. It transforms. In an instant, it becomes a sp ...
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Some fish swim upright. Others drift with the current. The flounder does something entirely different. It lies flat on the ocean floor. Its body blend ...
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Some fish thrive in warm, slow rivers. The trout prefers something different. It seeks cold, clear water with a steady current. For children, learning ...
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Some fish hide in deep waters. Others swim near the surface. The bass does both. It waits quietly. Then it strikes with speed. For children, learning ...
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Some fish drift with the current. Others hide among rocks. The tuna does neither. It cuts through the open ocean with powerful speed. It never stops m ...
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Some fish spend their whole lives in one place. The salmon does something extraordinary. It travels from rivers to the ocean and back again. This jour ...
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Some fish wear bright colors. Others swim in fast schools. But the catfish takes a different path. It rests quietly at the bottom. It uses whiskers to ...
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Have you ever seen a creature that looks like a snake but lives in water? That is the eel. It moves with a gentle, wavy motion. It hides in reefs, riv ...
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When we think of the ocean, we often picture dolphins leaping through waves or colorful fish darting between corals. Yet gliding silently beneath the ...
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Every parent has witnessed the magic moment. Your child points at the sky, head tilted, and asks, “Why is the sky blue?” Or they stare at a puddle and ...
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Simple future is the tense we use to talk about things that haven't happened yet. I will go to the park tomorrow. She will be seven next month. They w ...
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Past perfect continuous is the tense that shows an action was in progress for a period of time before another past event. I had been waiting for an ho ...
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Past perfect is the tense that shows which past action happened first. I had eaten before I went out. She had finished her homework when her friend ar ...
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Past continuous is the tense we use to describe actions that were happening at a specific time in the past. I was eating dinner at 6 o'clock. She was ...
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Simple past is the tense we use to talk about things that already happened. I walked to school yesterday. She ate pizza last night. They played outsid ...
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