
A non-fiction book, ideal for intermediate learners of English looking to improve and practise their English. The book is filled with useful vocabulary that is carefully graded and easy to understand, it also comes with audio, so that you can listen at the same time as reading. From the smallest fly to the biggest elephant, and from fish living at the bottom of the ocean to birds that fly several kilometres above land: this is the animal kingdom, the biggest group of living things in the world. Some are very different, others are the same in many ways - but these mammals, birds, fish reptiles, amphibians, and invertebrates have all managed to live for thousands and thousands of years. How do they find food, grow, keep safe, and have young - and what is the future for them in this fast-changing world?
This book investigates the biological diversity and survival strategies of various animal groups within the global ecosystem. Author Rachel Bladon utilizes a structured, graded pedagogical approach to present complex zoological information in a format accessible to intermediate English language learners. By examining the life cycles, habitats, and environmental challenges faced by diverse species, the text serves as both a scientific primer and a linguistic tool.
What You Will Find
Educators frequently identify the Oxford Bookworms series as a standard resource for structured language development. Experts note that the text successfully balances scientific accuracy with the controlled vocabulary requirements necessary for intermediate-level comprehension.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press España, S.A.
ISBN-10:
0194637891
ISBN-13:
9780194637893
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