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Books with title God Made Baby Animals

  • Baby Animals

    Scholastic

    Board book (Children's Press, March 1, 2013)
    Introduce your little one to some of nature's most adorable babies.Rookie Toddler books offer fun ways to engage with little ones during story time and play time. Each book includes story-related tips that help extend the reading experience and emphasize key learnings. Engaging photographs and illustrations will delight your toddler while encouraging a love of reading.
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  • Baby Animals

    Lara Ede

    Board book (Thomas Nelson, Oct. 31, 2011)
    Beautifully illustrated Carry Me books with touch and feel to educate and inspire young minds. Carry Me Baby Animals is a new delightful carry-me book all about animals. The touch and feel areas will inspire and delight children as they learn about lots of different animals and what they all might feel like! A cut-through handle means children can carry the book with them wherever they go!
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  • Baby Animals

    Shutterstock

    Paperback (Fog City Press / Weldon Owen, March 15, 2007)
    This series features stunning photographs of the worl'ds most fascinating creatures. You will fall in love with the baby animals on every page.
  • Baby Animals

    Judy Tatchell, Phillip Clarke, John Butler

    Paperback (Usborne Pub Ltd, Jan. 1, 2002)
    Provides information on tiger cubs, ducklings, joeys, tadpoles, elephant calves, and baby penguins and rabbits.
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  • Baby Animals

    Angela Marroni

    language (, Feb. 16, 2016)
    Baby animals, includes Bunny, Dolphin, Duckling, Kitten, Elephant, Giraffe, Hedgehog, Horse, Lamb, Lion, Mongoose, Monkey, Barn Owl, Puppy, Sea Lion, Zebra. Infants view of baby animals, ages 0-3.
  • Baby Animals

    Andrew Alex

    language (, Jan. 19, 2017)
    Interactive Cards with Images and Puzzles.Book 2: swallow, hedgehog, duck, guinea pig, tortoise, owl, pig, goat, deer, raccoon.All children love animals, especially baby ones, and this set of flashcards depicts some of the most popular.This charming set of cards is primarily aimed at very young children who aren’t yet ready to learn to read, but who are getting intrigued about the world around them. For this reason, the names of the animals and their babies don’t appear on the cards by default. However, it is possible to reveal them by double clicking or double tapping the bottom left-hand corner of the screen.• The cards show bright, attractive and extremely cute photographs of animal parents and their young.• Whether you choose to show the words or not, these appealing cards are a great way to help your child remember the names of animals and their offspring.• The photographic images are easily recognisable and, unlike simplified or cartoon-style drawings, will help children relate what they’re learning to real life.The warm feeling browsing through these images creates is difficult to convey in words.For details on the Alex’s Cards range visit the website http://alex.cards
  • Baby Animals

    Andrew Alex

    language (, Jan. 18, 2017)
    Interactive Cards with Images and Puzzles.Book 1: chicken, dog, cow, cat, goose, fox, horse, bear, sheep, rabbit.All children love animals, especially baby ones, and this set of flashcards depicts some of the most popular.This charming set of cards is primarily aimed at very young children who aren’t yet ready to learn to read, but who are getting intrigued about the world around them. For this reason, the names of the animals and their babies don’t appear on the cards by default. However, it is possible to reveal them by double clicking or double tapping the bottom left-hand corner of the screen.• The cards show bright, attractive and extremely cute photographs of animal parents and their young.• Whether you choose to show the words or not, these appealing cards are a great way to help your child remember the names of animals and their offspring.• The photographic images are easily recognisable and, unlike simplified or cartoon-style drawings, will help children relate what they’re learning to real life.The warm feeling browsing through these images creates is difficult to convey in words.For details on the Alex’s Cards range visit the website http://alex.cards
  • Baby Animals

    Tucker Slingsby

    Board book (Tucker Slingsby, March 15, 2006)
    This fun-filled picture and word book introduces a cute collection of pets and farm animals. With plenty of activities, and lots to talk about, this sturdy book with wipe-clean pages, is ideal for young children.
  • Baby Animals.

    NA

    Board book (DK Publishing, )
    BRAND NEW, Exactly same ISBN as listed, Please double check ISBN carefully before ordering.
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  • God Made Animals

    Jess Stainbrook

    Hardcover
    None
  • Baby Animals

    Georgia M. McNally

    eBook (, April 29, 2010)
    This volume was published in 1917. From the book's Foreword: I believe that every normal human child is born with a natural love for wild animals, and a desire to know them intimately. That this universal instinct sometimes is suppressed, and its tendrils often reach out in vain for something to which to cling, is not the fault of human nature, but environment. It is because of that pathetic desire to know the beautiful wild creatures of the world that we have zoological parks and gardens. The child or the adult who grows up, lives, and dies without having had a chance to be- come personally acquainted with a lot of inter- esting wild animals, loses much out of life. All healthy children are interested in animals, but most of all are they interested in young ani- mals. Naturally, also, it is the wild babies that appeal most strongly to the great universal motherhood instinct in woman, both tame and wild. I once knew personally a black bear cub that was literally nursed in the depths of a snowy Maine forest by a human foster mother, along with a human foster sister ; and both were happy ever after. If a woman can not write of jungle babies sympathetically and understandingly, who can? With Miss McNally, the love for wild animals and their offspring is no passing fancy, nor a fad of a day or an hour. It is good to know how the little four-handed and four-footed folk im- press a perfectly normal, genuine and old- fashioned American girl. It is no cause for wonder that her acquaintance with wild animals should have created a desire to set forth their babies, in word and picture, for the pleasure of others. Let us hope that old-fashioned human and humane interest in our living wild animals never will die, and that our love for young animals never will grow old. The better we know wild animals in life, the less we will feel like re- ducing them to a state of death, and of mini- mum interest! William t. Hornaday ............................................................................... Contnents: I. Baby Beavers II. Baby Orang-utans III. A Baby Hippopotamus IV. Baby Raccoons V. Baby Elephants VI. Baby Rhinos VII. Baby Bears VIII. Baby Camels IX. Baby Woodchucks X. Baby Skunks XI. Baby Tigers XII. The Baby Duck-Billed Playtpus and Echidna XIII. Baby Kangaroos XIV. Baby Rocky Mountain Goats XV. Baby Gorillas XVI. Baby Canada Lynx XVII. Baby Llamas XVIII. Baby Foxes XIX. Baby Lions XX. Baby Musk Oxen XXI. Baby Leopards XXII. Baby Moose XXIII. Baby Porcupines XXIV. Baby Pumas XXV. Baby Giraffes
  • Made By God: Animals

    School Specialty Publishing

    Paperback (In Celebration, July 28, 2003)
    This workbook offers science topics with the perspective that the world is created by God; that frame of reference is found throughout the presentation of content, through Bible verses, and through other biblical references.
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