ax |
a tool with a blade attached to the end of a long handle. An ax is used for chopping wood. |
bar |
a long piece of solid material used to support something, hold something together, or keep something outside or inside. |
curtain |
a piece of cloth that hangs in a window or other opening to shut out light or to cover something. |
doubt |
to not be certain or confident about something; to think that something might not be true. |
fuel |
anything such as wood or gasoline that is burned as a source of energy. |
hair |
a single, thin structure like a thread that grows on the body of humans and some animals. |
hall |
a long space in a building that people walk through to go from one room to another. |
native |
an original resident of a given place, such as the Inuit people of Alaska and northern Canada. |
railroad |
a road of two connected steel bars along which trains move, or a system of transportation that uses these roads. |
spoil |
to damage something so that you cannot use or enjoy it. |
stripe |
a line of color that is different in color from the area around it. |
track |
a mark or series of marks left on the ground by the feet of people or animals, or the wheels of machines; trail. |
usual |
most common; normal. |
voice |
the sound that comes from your mouth when you speak or sing. |
wheelbarrow |
a device used to carry rocks, soil, leaves, and other materials for short distances. A wheelbarrow has one or two wheels, two legs at the back, and handles for a person to push. |