You searched for: “toad
frog, frogs; toad, toads
frog, frogs (FRAWG, FRAHG; FRAWGZ) (noun)
Any of various small, tailless amphibians, having a smooth, moist, scaleless skin and powerful web-footed hind legs for leaping and swimming: Frogs and toads both hatch from eggs as tadpoles and live in the water until they grow their lower limbs.

A frog species (Psyllophrne didactyla), discovered in Cuba in 1996, is so tiny that it can sit comfortably on a human fingernail.

—This paragraph is based on information from
Scientific American Science Desk Reference; John Wiley & Sons, Inc. publisher;
1999; page 392.
toad, toads (TOHD, TOHDZ) (noun)
Members of numerous small, tailless amphibians that have a broader body and rough or warty, glandular skin, hatch in water, but later live mostly on land; usually in moist habitats: Art's biology teacher taught the class that toads and frogs have similar characteristics but that, at the same time, they are also quite different.

Toads feed on small invertebrates or animals that don't have a backbone; such as, worms and insects.

Toads have relatively short hind legs used for hopping, and they often have swellings containing glands that secrete an irritating fluid for defense purposes and they are terrestrial or semiterrestrial in habit.

Both frogs and toads have inconsistent common meanings.

Anura is the order of amphibians that contains the frogs and the toads. Their eggs (spawn) are covered with jelly, are laid in water, and hatch into aquatic larvae (tadpoles), which undergo a rapid and extensive metamorphosis in which the tail is absorbed and the gill slits are replaced by lungs. Most frogs (for example, Rana) live in damp places or are aquatic; some are arboreal. Toads (for example, Bufo) are better adapted to drier habitats.

—The content in this section is based on information from
The Facts on File Dictionary of Biology by Robert Hine;
Facts On File, Inc.; 2005; page 24.

When Jewel and Jerry visited the zoo, they went to the ponds and lakes section and observed several frogs; later they visited the wetlands section to count the toads.

toad, toed, towed
toad (TOHD) (noun)
An amphibious creature characterized by a rough, squat form which spends considerable time on land, returning to water to lay eggs: "He caught a toad in the garden and carried it to the edge of the pond."
toed (TOHD) (adjective)
A reference to a digit on the foot: "People are known as five-toed creatures."
towed (TOHD) (verb)
Pulled or dragged: "When we went camping, we towed a trailer with all of our camping gear behind the car."

A toad was towed to another pond by hanging on to one of its long-toed feet.

Is it possible that being pigeon-toed is a strange condition since it could mean that someone is half pigeon and half toad?

Units related to: “toad
(Latin: toad)
(Greek: toad)