How to Use skink in a Sentence
skink
noun-
But not all of the skinks with green innards are green on the outside.
— Jason Daley, Smithsonian, 17 May 2018 -
In northern parts of Australia, the skinks give birth to live young.
— Harmeet Kaur, CNN, 11 Apr. 2020 -
The skinks kept their tongues concealed for as long as possible.
— Shane Black, National Geographic, 8 June 2018 -
That’s the Western skink, which has dark brown and light beige stripes, one edged in black, on a body that wields that astonishing tail.
— Los Angeles Times, 13 Mar. 2021 -
If your colleagues or clients grow irate over unanswered emails, tell them to submit a complaint to Slinky, the blue-tongued skink.
— Andrea Sachs, The Seattle Times, 25 Dec. 2017 -
The researchers found the rear of the skink's tongue was nearly twice as brightly blue and ultraviolet as the tip.
— Charles Choi, Discover Magazine, 8 June 2018 -
One of my most irrational fears, besides skinks and jumping off of things, is lash curlers.
— Devon Abelman, Allure, 10 July 2018 -
The average skink comes in at around 4 inches long, weighing less than 0.07 ounces.
— Sara Kiley Watson, Popular Science, 15 June 2023 -
Arnhem Land Gorges skink is a member of the genus Bellatorias, like this lizard.
— Anna Funk, Discover Magazine, 16 Nov. 2020 -
In one case, a female skink was basking with her family when a snake appeared near their crevice.
— Hannah Thomasy, New York Times, 24 Oct. 2022 -
Native species,like the skinks and fence lizard that are from here, can be threatened by introductions of nonnatives.
— Carol Motsinger, Cincinnati.com, 31 Aug. 2017 -
The flooding killed a blue-tongued skink lizard, one of the many animals that call the science and technology museum home.
— Neal Earley, Arkansas Online, 19 Feb. 2021 -
These animals, such as the Western three-toed skink or Transvaal grass lizard, still have teeny arms or legs, but those are mostly useless.
— Washington Post, 20 Dec. 2020 -
And though our crew had logged dozens of interesting finds, including an eastern hognose snake and a five-lined skink, the target species had yet to be seen.
— Paul A. Smith, Journal Sentinel, 14 Aug. 2022 -
Along with the Burmese Python, Andersen brought an armadillo, a chinchilla, a leopard tortoise and an Australian blue-tongued skink.
— Lisa Dejong, cleveland.com, 5 Mar. 2018 -
The animals included rattlesnakes, boas, a blue-tongued skink and a Gila monster.
— Amy McRary, USA TODAY, 13 May 2017 -
The green blood of the skinks illustrates the perils of trying to justify the variety of blood pigments in nature as purely adaptive.
— Quanta Magazine, 22 Apr. 2019 -
These hunts have helped to save local populations of two threatened species—the greater bilby, a small, large-eared native marsupial, and the great desert skink.
— Anthony Ham, Smithsonian Magazine, 17 Mar. 2021 -
Junior Zoe Miller was in the education center holding Marvin, a blue-tongued skink, on her forearm.
— Hannah Sparling, Cincinnati.com, 22 Dec. 2017 -
The Persian striped skink (Eumeces persicus), discovered in 2017 in Iran, was on sale within three months.
— Pavel Toropov, Smithsonian Magazine, 2 June 2021 -
But shape isn't everything, as a team of researchers recently discovered while watching hundreds of skink lizards court and spark .
— Veronique Greenwood, Discover Magazine, 29 Aug. 2011 -
In addition to the traditional hamsters and fish, teachers now are caring for things like chinchillas, rats, skinks, chicks, hissing cockroaches and, of course, snakes.
— John Wisely, Detroit Free Press, 7 May 2020 -
But five species of skink lizards native to New Guinea and the Soloman Islands have brilliant bright green liquid pumping through their circulatory system.
— Corryn Wetzel, Smithsonian Magazine, 30 Oct. 2020 -
Several Maryland skinks have blue iridescent tails when young.
— Ellen Nibali, baltimoresun.com, 3 July 2019 -
Perrywinkle Perrywinkle, who turns 20 in December, is an apt name for this blue-tongue skink.
— cincinnati.com, 3 Dec. 2019 -
In Australia, yellow-bellied three-toed skinks that live in higher, colder regions bear live young, while those in warmer lowlands lay eggs, which are harder to keep warm under cold conditions.
— National Geographic, 16 Jan. 2016 -
In Australia, yellow-bellied three-toed skinks that live in higher, colder regions bear live young, while those in warmer lowlands lay eggs, which are harder to keep warm under cold conditions.
— National Geographic, 16 Jan. 2016 -
Eighteen reptiles, including other boas, a second skink and pythons, survived.
— Amy McRary, USA TODAY, 13 May 2017 -
See a small fiddler crab scuttling along a log; a skink's dark and half-closed eye; a tiny green buffalo treehopper clinging, upside-down, to a leaf; a Brazilian verbena flower so small that dozens could fit on a quarter.
— Star Tribune, 29 June 2021 -
And a blue-tongued skink that was in such bad shape that its eyes had sunk in has gotten better after a veterinarian scraped away the debris and scales that had grown over its eyes and probably had prevented it from seeing, according to Peet.
— Dana Hedgpeth, Washington Post, 28 Dec. 2022
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'skink.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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