This document provides information about various domestic animals. It describes the origins of keeping animals at home and lists some of the earliest domesticated animals like dogs. It then provides details about common farm animals like cows, pigs, sheep, horses, chickens, cats, dogs, rabbits, and geese. It describes what products are obtained from each animal like milk, meat, wool, eggs etc. It also pairs the male and female names and offspring for each species.
This document describes the four seasons - spring, summer, fall, and winter - and their associated months. It lists characteristics of each season, such as spring bringing warmer weather and the arrival of migratory birds, summer having the most sunshine and ripe berries, fall seeing golden fields and maturing fruits and vegetables, and winter covering the ground in snow and ice for winter sports. Overall, it celebrates the beauty of Estonia's four seasons.
The document discusses Easter traditions in Estonia. It explains that Easter has many names in Estonian, including Muna pühad, Kiige pühad, and Ülestõusmispühad. It is a movable feast celebrated seven weeks after Shrove Tuesday. Symbols of Easter include eggs, rabbits, spring grass, pussy willows, and daffodils. Traditional Easter customs involve dyeing and giving eggs, egg games, and going to church services. The Easter Bunny also hides eggs for children to find.
This document discusses different animals and their characteristics. It asks questions about which animal is fluffy like a lamb, who is the lady of the hare household, which animal has teeth full of acorns, who is the master of the pine forest, which animal plows without a plow or horses, and which animal is hairy on the outside but honey-filled inside. The document then thanks the reader and lists sources used.
This document provides information about various domestic animals. It describes the origins of keeping animals at home and lists some of the earliest domesticated animals like dogs. It then provides details about common farm animals like cows, pigs, sheep, horses, chickens, cats, dogs, rabbits, and geese. It describes what products are obtained from each animal like milk, meat, wool, eggs etc. It also pairs the male and female names and offspring for each species.
This document describes the four seasons - spring, summer, fall, and winter - and their associated months. It lists characteristics of each season, such as spring bringing warmer weather and the arrival of migratory birds, summer having the most sunshine and ripe berries, fall seeing golden fields and maturing fruits and vegetables, and winter covering the ground in snow and ice for winter sports. Overall, it celebrates the beauty of Estonia's four seasons.
The document discusses Easter traditions in Estonia. It explains that Easter has many names in Estonian, including Muna pühad, Kiige pühad, and Ülestõusmispühad. It is a movable feast celebrated seven weeks after Shrove Tuesday. Symbols of Easter include eggs, rabbits, spring grass, pussy willows, and daffodils. Traditional Easter customs involve dyeing and giving eggs, egg games, and going to church services. The Easter Bunny also hides eggs for children to find.
This document discusses different animals and their characteristics. It asks questions about which animal is fluffy like a lamb, who is the lady of the hare household, which animal has teeth full of acorns, who is the master of the pine forest, which animal plows without a plow or horses, and which animal is hairy on the outside but honey-filled inside. The document then thanks the reader and lists sources used.
The poem describes several early spring flowers including crocuses, bluebells, buttercups, dandelions, and daffodils emerging from the ground as spring arrives. Each flower is mentioned in a short stanza noting characteristics like their color, movement in the wind, or abundance across the meadow.
This document contains descriptions of several common Estonian bird species. It provides details on their physical appearance, diet, and habitat. It also includes some songs or calls for each bird. The species described include the chaffinch, great tit, white-backed woodpecker, goldfinch, crane, and others. Additional sources with more information on Estonian birds are also listed at the end.
1) The document describes various animal species that live in Estonian forests, including their common names, diets, behaviors, habitats, physical characteristics, and other distinguishing features.
2) Animals mentioned include fox, bear, moose, deer, boar, marten, hare, wolf, lynx, badger, squirrel, elk, and hedgehog.
3) Details provided for each species include what they eat, sounds they make, whether they hibernate, physical traits of males vs females, behaviors like denning or nesting habits.
There is one tree with 12 branches, each with 4 bird nests containing 7 eggs each. The year is divided into 4 seasons: autumn, winter, spring, and summer. Autumn months are September, October, November. Winter months are December, January, February. Spring months are March, April, May. Summer months are June, July, August.
The poem describes several early spring flowers including crocuses, bluebells, buttercups, dandelions, and daffodils emerging from the ground as spring arrives. Each flower is mentioned in a short stanza noting characteristics like their color, movement in the wind, or abundance across the meadow.
This document contains descriptions of several common Estonian bird species. It provides details on their physical appearance, diet, and habitat. It also includes some songs or calls for each bird. The species described include the chaffinch, great tit, white-backed woodpecker, goldfinch, crane, and others. Additional sources with more information on Estonian birds are also listed at the end.
1) The document describes various animal species that live in Estonian forests, including their common names, diets, behaviors, habitats, physical characteristics, and other distinguishing features.
2) Animals mentioned include fox, bear, moose, deer, boar, marten, hare, wolf, lynx, badger, squirrel, elk, and hedgehog.
3) Details provided for each species include what they eat, sounds they make, whether they hibernate, physical traits of males vs females, behaviors like denning or nesting habits.
There is one tree with 12 branches, each with 4 bird nests containing 7 eggs each. The year is divided into 4 seasons: autumn, winter, spring, and summer. Autumn months are September, October, November. Winter months are December, January, February. Spring months are March, April, May. Summer months are June, July, August.
2. Neli teevad aset, kaks
näitavad tuled, üks
läheb magama.
Päeval karjas, öösel
orjas.
Mitmesuguseid
ameteid pean, karja
hoian ja kelku vean,
vahel olen tubli
jahimees, mõnikord
valvuriks maja ees.
3. Nui ees, väät taga,
hiirekelder keskel.
Mööda puid ma ronin
üles, vahel istun sinu
süles. Vurrud, saba, neli
käppa, salamahti toitu
näppan.
Väike koon ja pikad
vurrud, vöödiline
kasukas. Ennast pesta
armastab, aga vett ei
kasuta.
4. Heinamaa, kaks korda
aastas niidetakse.
Vammus seljas soe ja
paks, kasvab järjest
pikemaks. Likat- lõkat
käivad käärid mööda
selga, pead ja sääri.
Minu seljast pöetud
kuuest, saad sa
kindad, sukad uued.
5. Eest irki- orki, tagant
siuh- säuh.
Neli piimaandjat, neli
karjamaale kandjat,
kaks koerakandjat,
üks parmupiits.
Sarvi kannan, piima
annan, aga piimast
teha võib maitsvat
juustu, koort ja võid.
6. Mees künnab, ei ole
atra ega hobust.
Kärss mul pikk, ma
tuhnin poris,
mõnutundest suus
mul jorin- ruik- ruik-
ruik ja röh- röh- röh.
Mees läheb metsa,
selga teibaid täis.
7. Üks ait, neli nurka, iga
nurga all nael rauda.
Sööda kui venda, seo
kui varast.
Harva, kui näed linnas
mind, nüüd viib auto
koju sind. Maal mu
tööd ka vähe vaja,
traktor vagusid seal
ajab. Rohkem ainult
võistlusrajal, proovin
jõudu, võidu ajan.