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Can You Outsmart an Elementary School Biology Test?

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Question 1

What Does a Caterpillar Become?

Question 1

How Do Fish Breathe Underwater?

Question 1

What Organ Is Responsible for Thinking and Memory?

Question 1

What’s the Smallest Unit of Life?

Question 1

Which Part of the Body Helps With Balance?

Question 1

Which Body Part Is Used for Tasting?

Question 1

What Type of Animal Is a Lion?

Question 1

What Do Animals Need to Survive?

Question 1

What Is the Function of Eyelashes?

Question 1

What Does a Bird Use to Fly?

Question 1

What Happens When You Sweat?

Question 1

What Causes Your Shadow to Appear?

Question 1

Which of These Creatures Has Eight Legs?

Question 1

Which of These Animals Is a Herbivore?

Question 1

Why Are Wetlands Important?

Question 1

Why Do Squirrels Store Nuts?

Question 1

What Part of the Body Helps You Smell?

Question 1

What Happens When You Blink?

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What Is an Ecosystem?

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How Does a Baby Breathe Before Birth?

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Which Food Gives the Most Calcium?

Question 1

Which Part of a Flower Makes Seeds?

Question 1

What Do Snakes Shed as They Grow?

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What Does the Spine Protect?

Question 1

What Do Plants Use Their Roots for?

Question 1

What Is the Main Job of Red Blood Cells?

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What Do Bees Collect From Flowers?

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Which Animal Lays Eggs?

Question 1

What Helps Your Bones Stay Strong?

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What Do Tadpoles Grow Into?

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Which Sense Uses Your Nose?

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What Part of a Plant Holds It in the Ground?

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Which Living Thing Is a Producer in a Food Chain?

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Which Body System Controls Your Movements?

Question 1

Which of These Animals Is Cold-Blooded?

Question 1

What Helps Your Body Fight Sickness?

Question 1

What Do Plants Release Into the Air?

Question 1

Does the Heart Pump Blood Throughout the Body?

Question 1

Do We Stay Alive by Breathing in Carbon Dioxide?

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Do Plants Need Oxygen for Photosynthesis?

Question 1

What Body Part Helps You See?

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Which Body Part Helps You Hear?

Question 1

What Organ Helps You Breathe?

Question 1

What Part of a Tree Carries Water From Roots to Leaves?

Question 1

Which Part of the Body Digests Food?

Question 1

What Organ Helps Filter Waste From Your Blood?

Question 1

What Do Humans Use Their Skin for?

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What Do Bones Connect to at Joints?

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What Does an Omnivore Eat?

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What Gas Do Plants Take in?

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Which of These Is a Vertebrate?

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Which Living Thing Is a Decomposer?

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Which of These Is a Reptile?

Question 1

What Does the Liver Help the Body Do?

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What Body Part Helps Birds Steer?

Question 1

What Gives Blood Its Red Color?

Question 1

Which of These Animals Undergoes Metamorphosis?

Question 1

What Is the Job of the Large Intestine?

Question 1

What Is the First Stage of a Butterfly’s Life Cycle?

Question 1

How Do Penguins Keep Warm?

Question 1

What Is the Job of White Blood Cells?

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Which System Includes the Bones?

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Which Body System Controls Breathing?

Question 1

How Do Ants Communicate?

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What’s the Purpose of Feathers?

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Which Animal Lives in a Hive and Makes Honey?

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What Is the Main Purpose of Leaves?

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Which of These Helps Keep Your Heart Healthy?

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What Is an Example of a Carnivore?

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What Happens When You Break a Bone?

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What Type of Teeth Do Herbivores Use to Chew Plants?

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Which of These Animals Is an Invertebrate?

Question 1

What Is the Job of the Stem in a Plant?

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Which of These Is a Basic Need for All Animals?

Question 1

What Does a Spider Use to Spin a Web?

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Which Sense Is Mainly Used When Reading a Book?

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Why Do Birds Migrate?

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What Is One Reason a Giraffe Has a Long Neck?

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What’s the Function of Your Rib Cage?

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What Does a Food Web Show?

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What Do Rainforests Need Most to Thrive?

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What Happens to Water in a Plant?

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What Sense Helps You Feel Heat and Texture?

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Which Animal Grows From Egg to Larva to Pupa to Adult?

Question 1

What Is Chlorophyll?

Question 1

Which of These Is an Example of Camouflage?

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What Body System Includes Your Brain and Nerves?

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What Type of Animal Eats Both Meat and Plants?

Question 1

What Is the Function of Fur on Animals?

Question 1

What Do Frogs Use Their Long Tongues for?

1
Worm
2
Butterfly
3
Ant
4
Bee

Caterpillars go through metamorphosis, forming a chrysalis and transforming into butterflies.
1
Skin
2
Nostrils
3
Lungs
4
Gills

Fish use gills to extract oxygen from water and release carbon dioxide.
1
Heart
2
Lungs
3
Liver
4
Brain

The brain controls thinking, memory, emotions, and decisions by processing signals from around the body.
1
Organism
2
Cell
3
Organ
4
Tissue

Cells are the building blocks of all living things, from tiny bacteria to humans.
1
Inner ear
2
Liver
3
Nose
4
Stomach

The inner ear contains tiny structures that sense movement and help you maintain balance and orientation.
1
Nose
2
Tongue
3
Foot
4
Ear

Your tongue has taste buds that detect sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami flavors.
1
Mammal
2
Amphibian
3
Reptile
4
Bird

Lions are warm-blooded mammals that give birth to live young and nurse them with milk.
1
Glue
2
Plastic
3
TV
4
Water

Water is essential for animals to regulate body temperature, digest food, and eliminate waste.
1
Help you smell
2
Protect eyes from dust
3
Balance hearing
4
Filter air

Eyelashes protect your eyes by catching dust and debris before it enters.
1
Legs
2
Wings
3
Nose
4
Teeth

Birds have strong, lightweight wings covered in feathers that allow them to fly through the air.
1
You absorb water
2
Your body cools down
3
You lose oxygen
4
You get stronger

Sweating helps regulate body temperature by releasing heat as moisture evaporates from the skin.
1
Gravity pulling
2
Breathing air
3
Blocking light
4
Sound waves

Shadows are made when something blocks light from reaching the surface behind it.
1
Ant
2
Wasp
3
Spider
4
Bee

Spiders are arachnids and have eight legs, unlike insects that only have six.
1
Cow
2
Wolf
3
Eagle
4
Shark

Cows eat only plants and grasses, making them classic examples of herbivores.
1
They’re fun to swim in
2
They hold rocks
3
They clean water and support life
4
They’re made of ice

Wetlands filter water, prevent floods, and provide habitats for many living things.
1
To keep warm
2
To build nests
3
To eat during winter
4
To hide them from birds

Squirrels bury nuts to ensure they have food when it’s scarce in colder months.
1
Hands
2
Feet
3
Nose
4
Eyes

Your nose detects different scents and sends that information to your brain to identify smells.
1
You hear better
2
Your brain shuts off
3
Your bones grow
4
Your eyes get cleaned and moistened

Blinking spreads tears and clears debris to keep your eyes clean and moist.
1
A city
2
A community of living and non-living things
3
A cloud
4
A single plant

Ecosystems include all organisms and physical environments in a particular area interacting with each other.
1
By swallowing air
2
Through the umbilical cord
3
Through the nose
4
With lungs

Oxygen is passed from the mother to the baby via the umbilical cord, not by breathing air.
1
Bread
2
Chicken
3
Apples
4
Milk

Milk is rich in calcium, which is important for growing strong bones and teeth.
1
Stem
2
Petal
3
Ovary
4
Leaf

The ovary in a flower contains ovules, which develop into seeds after fertilization.
1
Skin
2
Eyes
3
Bones
4
Teeth

Snakes regularly shed their outer layer of skin to allow for growth and remove parasites.
1
Liver
2
Stomach
3
Spinal cord
4
Heart

The spine encases and protects the spinal cord, which sends messages between the brain and body.
1
To fly
2
To absorb water and nutrients
3
To breathe
4
To photosynthesize

Roots anchor the plant and take in water and nutrients from the soil.
1
Fight infections
2
Pump blood
3
Digest food
4
Carry oxygen

Red blood cells transport oxygen from the lungs to body tissues and bring carbon dioxide back to the lungs.
1
Water
2
Leaves
3
Bark
4
Nectar

Bees gather nectar to make honey and help pollinate plants as they travel from flower to flower.
1
Dog
2
Horse
3
Cow
4
Chicken

Chickens and most birds lay eggs to reproduce, with the embryo developing inside the egg shell.
1
Calcium
2
Caffeine
3
Oxygen
4
Sugar

Calcium is a mineral found in dairy and leafy greens that keeps your bones dense and healthy.
1
Frogs
2
Lizards
3
Fish
4
Snakes

Tadpoles are the larval stage of frogs and go through metamorphosis as they develop legs and lungs.
1
Smell
2
Touch
3
Taste
4
Hearing

Your nose detects smells using receptors that send signals to the brain's olfactory system.
1
Leaves
2
Flower
3
Stem
4
Roots

Roots anchor the plant in the soil and absorb water and minerals needed for growth.
1
Owl
2
Rabbit
3
Fox
4
Grass

Grass makes its own food through photosynthesis and is the base of many food chains.
1
Muscular system
2
Respiratory system
3
Digestive system
4
Circulatory system

The muscular system allows you to move your body using muscles attached to bones.
1
Elephant
2
Cat
3
Horse
4
Snake

Snakes are reptiles, meaning their body temperature changes with the environment instead of staying constant.
1
Platelets
2
White blood cells
3
Plasma
4
Red blood cells

White blood cells destroy viruses, bacteria, and other invaders that cause infections.
1
Sulfur
2
Carbon dioxide
3
Nitrogen
4
Oxygen

During photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen into the atmosphere.
1
Yes
2
No

The heart is a muscular organ that pumps oxygen-rich blood throughout the body, supplying tissues and removing waste.
1
Yes
2
No

We stay alive by breathing in oxygen, not carbon dioxide, which is actually a waste gas we exhale.
1
No
2
Yes

Plants do not need oxygen for photosynthesis; instead, they use carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight to produce energy.
1
Nose
2
Eyes
3
Tongue
4
Ears

The eyes detect light and send signals to the brain to form images of the world around you.
1
Ears
2
Eyes
3
Mouth
4
Nose

Your ears capture sound waves and send them to your brain, allowing you to understand noises and speech.
1
Stomach
2
Lungs
3
Heart
4
Kidneys

Lungs take in oxygen and remove carbon dioxide during the process of breathing.
1
Bark
2
Trunk
3
Fruit
4
Branches

The trunk transports water and nutrients through xylem tissue to nourish the entire tree.
1
Brain
2
Stomach
3
Liver
4
Lungs

The stomach uses acid and enzymes to break food into nutrients the body can use.
1
Kidneys
2
Liver
3
Heart
4
Lungs

Kidneys remove toxins and waste from your blood, producing urine as part of your body’s filtration system.
1
Protection
2
Thinking
3
Breathing
4
Seeing

Skin is the body’s largest organ and protects you from germs, injury, and harmful sun rays.
1
Veins
2
Muscles
3
Lungs
4
Blood

Joints connect bones and allow movement with the help of muscles and ligaments.
1
Fruits only
2
Only plants
3
Plants and animals
4
Only meat

Omnivores like humans eat both meat and plant-based foods for a balanced diet.
1
Nitrogen
2
Carbon dioxide
3
Hydrogen
4
Oxygen

Plants absorb carbon dioxide through tiny pores in their leaves and use it during photosynthesis.
1
Jellyfish
2
Octopus
3
Dog
4
Worm

Dogs have a backbone, which makes them vertebrates unlike jellyfish or worms.
1
Tree
2
Cow
3
Ant
4
Mushroom

Mushrooms break down dead plants and animals, returning nutrients to the soil.
1
Turtle
2
Penguin
3
Frog
4
Whale

Turtles are reptiles with dry scaly skin and lay eggs on land.
1
Store oxygen
2
Filter toxins
3
Pump blood
4
Create bones

The liver removes toxins from the blood and processes nutrients from food.
1
Eyes
2
Legs
3
Wings
4
Beaks

Birds use their wings to generate lift and steer while flying.
1
Platelets
2
Hemoglobin
3
Chlorophyll
4
Plasma

Hemoglobin in red blood cells binds with oxygen and gives blood its red color.
1
Fish
2
Elephant
3
Dog
4
Butterfly

Butterflies transform from eggs to caterpillars, then to pupae, and finally into adults.
1
Pump blood
2
Break down proteins
3
Absorb water
4
Store oxygen

The large intestine absorbs water from digested food and stores waste before elimination.
1
Egg
2
Butterfly
3
Chrysalis
4
Caterpillar

Butterflies begin life as tiny eggs laid on leaves by adult females.
1
Fast running
2
Thick feathers and fat
3
Sunlight
4
Hot sand

Penguins have dense feathers and a thick fat layer to insulate against extreme cold.
1
Build muscles
2
Fight infection
3
Carry oxygen
4
Control sugar

White blood cells defend your body by identifying and destroying harmful viruses and bacteria.
1
Digestive system
2
Circulatory system
3
Skeletal system
4
Respiratory system

The skeletal system includes bones and joints that provide structure and protect internal organs.
1
Digestive system
2
Skeletal system
3
Respiratory system
4
Nervous system

The respiratory system includes lungs and airways, managing the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide.
1
With chemicals
2
With speech
3
With blinking
4
By changing color

Ants use pheromones—chemical signals—to communicate with each other about food or danger.
1
Breathing
2
Swimming
3
Seeing
4
Flight and warmth

Feathers help birds fly, stay dry, and keep warm by trapping heat close to their bodies.
1
Butterfly
2
Bee
3
Ant
4
Spider

Bees live in hives, where they store honey made from nectar collected from flowers.
1
Make food for the plant
2
Store water
3
Attract insects
4
Grow roots

Leaves perform photosynthesis, converting sunlight into energy the plant can use to grow.
1
Eating candy
2
Exercise
3
Watching TV
4
Sleeping late

Regular exercise strengthens your heart, improves circulation, and helps maintain a healthy weight.
1
Sheep
2
Horse
3
Lion
4
Cow

Lions eat other animals for food, which classifies them as carnivores.
1
It gets replaced
2
It melts
3
It disappears
4
It can heal over time

Bones are living tissue and can repair themselves with rest, nutrients, and medical help.
1
Pointy fangs
2
Sharp canines
3
Small incisors
4
Flat molars

Herbivores use broad, flat molars to grind and break down tough plant material.
1
Mouse
2
Cat
3
Jellyfish
4
Bird

Jellyfish don’t have a backbone, making them invertebrates unlike cats or birds.
1
Carry water and support the plant
2
Digest food
3
Catch insects
4
Filter light

The stem transports nutrients and water and holds the plant upright for sunlight exposure.
1
Books
2
Music
3
Food
4
Toys

All animals need food to grow, produce energy, and stay alive.
1
Hair
2
Silk
3
Feathers
4
Bark

Spiders use special glands to produce silk, which they use to spin webs for catching prey.
1
Sight
2
Hearing
3
Smell
4
Taste

Your eyes allow you to see letters and words so you can read and understand a book.
1
To grow bigger
2
To find food and better weather
3
To sleep more
4
To avoid other birds

Birds migrate to warmer places with more food when temperatures drop in their usual homes.
1
To hear better
2
To walk faster
3
To dig holes
4
To reach high leaves

Giraffes use their long necks to eat leaves from tall trees other animals can’t reach.
1
Makes you taller
2
Helps you jump
3
Protects your heart and lungs
4
Stores food

The rib cage shields the heart and lungs from damage and helps you breathe.
1
Plant parts
2
Growth of animals
3
Connections between many food chains
4
Oxygen flow

A food web displays how different food chains in an ecosystem are linked together.
1
Strong winds
2
Rain and warm temperatures
3
Cold weather
4
Snow

Rainforests depend on heavy rainfall and constant warmth to support diverse plant and animal life.
1
It stays in the soil
2
It floats in the air
3
It travels from roots to leaves
4
It turns to sugar in roots

Water enters roots and moves through the stem to the leaves for photosynthesis.
1
Smell
2
Sight
3
Taste
4
Touch

Touch receptors in your skin let you detect temperature, pressure, and texture.
1
Butterfly
2
Elephant
3
Penguin
4
Rabbit

Butterflies go through complete metamorphosis, changing through four distinct life stages.
1
Green pigment in plants
2
Tree bark
3
Plant sugar
4
Animal blood

Chlorophyll absorbs sunlight for photosynthesis and gives plants their green color.
1
A tall tree
2
A green frog on a leaf
3
A red shirt
4
A glass of water

Camouflage helps animals blend into their surroundings to avoid predators.
1
Nervous system
2
Skeletal system
3
Digestive system
4
Respiratory system

The nervous system sends signals to and from the brain, controlling all body functions and sensations.
1
Insectivore
2
Carnivore
3
Omnivore
4
Herbivore

Omnivores eat both plants and meat, which gives them a wider range of food choices.
1
Makes them grow
2
Protects from light
3
Helps them fly
4
Keeps them warm

Fur provides insulation to help regulate body temperature in cold weather.
1
Changing color
2
Catching insects
3
Making sounds
4
Swimming faster

Frogs use sticky, extendable tongues to quickly catch insects for food.
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Think you’ve still got your grade school biology smarts? This quiz will test your knowledge of basic biology—organs, ecosystems, animals, and more. Let’s see if you’re sharper than a fifth grader when it comes to science!

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