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ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
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ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?
ELA 3: Whale Anatomy 27 Views
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Description:
This is mandatory viewing for all of our whale users, but...we guess you humans can have a look as whale.
Transcript
- 00:03
[Dino and Coop singing]
- 00:13
Whales have some interesting body parts that help them survive in the ocean.
- 00:17
Um…that is interesting, but uh…no. [A foot stuck to the top of a whale]
- 00:21
What body parts are we talking about?
- 00:23
Well, all whales have a blowhole, flukes, and flippers, just to name a few. [Dino pointing at a blackboard]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
A whale’s blowhole is like a nostril—except instead of being inside a nose, it’s on
- 00:32
top of their head. [Mans nose slides to the top of his head]
- 00:33
Makes it awfully tough to reach with a Kleenex.
- 00:35
Some whales, like the humpback whale, have two blowholes…which allow the whale to breathe
- 00:39
a bit more easily. [Thumbs up]
- 00:41
A blowhole closes when a whale dives into the water and opens when it comes back to [The whale going under the water and the blowhole closes]
- 00:45
the surface.
- 00:46
A good thing, too, because otherwise it might inhale a bunch of salt-water, and would probably
- 00:50
launch into a prolonged coughing fit… [Whale coughing]
- 00:52
Flukes are the horizontal part of a whale’s tail.
- 00:54
They have no bones in them and move up and down using powerful muscles connected to a
- 00:59
whale’s backbone.
- 01:00
We once bumped into a whale tail we knew in a small club in Paris. [Whale tail behind a drum kit]
- 01:03
We thought maybe it followed us there…but, turns out it was just a fluke…
- 01:07
All right, let’s flipper right past that one…
- 01:09
Whales actually used to have limbs, like humans do… but over time, these limbs evolved into
- 01:14
flippers.
- 01:16
Flippers help a whale steer their body in the right direction.
- 01:19
Like…toward a Carl’s Jr. when it’s feeling snacky. [Whale going to an underwater Carl's Jr.]
- 01:22
Did you know that whales have no ears? [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 01:24
They also have no sweat glands.
- 01:26
Which comes in real handy anytime they’re at a Broadway musical audition. [Whale wearing a wig]
- 01:30
All whales have a thick layer of fat under their skin, called blubber.
- 01:33
The blubber can store energy, as well as keep a whale warm in cold waters.
- 01:37
Whales used to be hunted for their blubber—it was used to make oil for lamps. [Picture of whale hunting]
- 01:41
But in today’s lamps…it really just makes a mess.
- 01:44
So most whales are big fans of modern technology… [Whale giving the thumbs up to a modern lamp]
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