[
UK
/fɹˈɒɡ/
]
[ US /ˈfɹɑɡ/ ]
[ US /ˈfɹɑɡ/ ]
VERB
- hunt frogs for food
NOUN
- a decorative loop of braid or cord
- a person of French descent
- any of various tailless stout-bodied amphibians with long hind limbs for leaping; semiaquatic and terrestrial species
How To Use frog In A Sentence
- Frogs and newts have already been attracted to three new natural spring ponds at Abbey Meads School.
- In some places it is primeval and wet, where streaky barked eucalyptus strive upwards through dripping mists alive with frog croaks.
- A study by Conservation International, an American organisation, found that nearly a third of frogs, toads, newts and other amphibian species were likely to disappear within 100 years.
- The familiar frogs, toads, and salamanders have been present since at least the Jurassic Period.
- The frogs' eggs are in a protective jelly.
- Reilly will compare the population status and dynamics of the European common frog in the three different types of peat bogs found in Ireland.
- The body of the missing woman was recovered by police frogmen from a lake near her home.
- The bee, the robin, the frog, and the dragonfly are all made using wax that I dyed with black cobalt stain. Kater’s Art » Blog Archive » Wall Mosaic 1: Girl with Scythe
- Some species with large mouths and small bills, such as nighthawks, whip-poor wills, and the aptly named frogmouth owls, open their bills wide as they fly into insects, and the prey is captured in the birds’ gaping maws.
- The handsome prince was changed into a frog.