But there's this pouch just below my belly button, very marsupial, where the kangaroo lives.
Any mammal of which the female typically has a pouch in which it rears its young, which are born immature, through early infancy, such as the kangaroo or koala
A mammal whose young are born at an extremely immature stage and undergo further development in a pouch while they remain attached to a mammary gland; includes kangaroos, opossums, and koalas
A marsupial is an animal such as a kangaroo or an opossum. Female marsupials carry their babies in a pouch on their stomach. an animal such as a kangaroo which carries its babies in a pocket of skin on its body (marsupium ). Any mammal of the infraclass Marsupialia, characterized by premature birth and continued development outside the womb. The young remain attached to the mother's teats for a period corresponding to the late stages of fetal development of a placental mammal. More than 170 species (e.g., bandicoots, kangaroos, koalas, wombats) are found in Australia, New Guinea, and nearby islands. About 65 species of opossum occur in the Americas and seven species of ratlike marsupials in South America. Many species have a pouch (marsupium), a fold of skin covering the nipples on the mother's lower belly, where the young continue their development
Common name for any of a large group of mammals lacking a placenta, many of which carry and nourish their young in an abdominal pouch after birth (i e kangaroo)
Any mammal of which the female typically has a pouch in which it rears its young, which are born immature, through early infancy.eg. kangaroo
{i} any mammal of the order Marsupialia (mostly found in Australia); animal which carries and nurses its offspring in a pouch (Zoology)
Having a pouch for carrying the immature young; of or pertaining to the Marsupialia
Marsupial babies are born very tiny and undeveloped Straight after birth the babies attach themselves to their mother's nipples The babies stay attached until they develop more completely The nipples of most female marsupials are in a pouch on the stomach Not all female marsupials have a pouch All marsupials are mammals Kangaroos, koalas, quolls, and gliders are marsupials
mammals of which the females have a pouch (the marsupium) containing the teats where the young are fed and carried of or relating to the marsupials; "marsupial animals
A mammal that, in the female of the species, has an external pouch into which incompletely developed young climb to nurse and finish developing
a mammal of the order Marsupialia comprised of opossums, kangaroos, wombats and bandicoots having a pouch containing the mammary glands and serving as a receptacle for the young
A marsupial is a mammal which carries its young in a pouch after a short time in the uterus
adj 1 pertaining to, resembling, or having a marsupium 2 of or pertaining to the marsupials -n any of the Marsupialia, the order which includes all of the viviparous mammas susch as kangaroos, wombats, possums and related animals, fond chiefly in the Australian region, and in South and Central America The female of most species has a marsupium [NL marsupialis, from L marsupium ]
{s} of or pertaining to the order Marsupialia; having a pouch like that of a marsupial animal (Zoology)
A member of a group of mammals 1) that generally do not have a placenta and 2) whose females generally have a pouch on the abdomen containing the nipples, where newborn young are carried Marsupials include bandicoots, kangaroos, opossums, wombats and others
mammals of which the females have a pouch (the marsupium) containing the teats where the young are fed and carried