Kangaroos - meaning and definition. What is Kangaroos
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What (who) is Kangaroos - definition

AMERICAN BRAND OF ATHLETIC SHOE
KangaROOS
  • White KangaRoos sneakers

kangaroo         
  • A kangaroo and an emu feature on the [[Australian coat of arms]]
  • Two male [[red kangaroo]]s boxing
  • [[Western grey kangaroo]]s
  • A newborn joey sucking on a teat in the pouch
  • The hind leg of a kangaroo
  • Tasmanian eastern grey kangaroo]] in motion
  • Kangaroo meat on sale in Melbourne
  • A "kangaroo crossing" sign on an Australian highway
  • Kangaroo and joey in pouch
  • Kangaroos in their native grassland habitat
  • Red kangaroos, Liverpool Plains, Sydney, ca. 1819
  • A male [[red kangaroo]] grazing
  • A male [[red kangaroo]]
  • [[Aboriginal Australians]] hunting kangaroos
  • A kangaroo in a domestic setting, [[Queensland]], Australia, circa 1900–1910
  • palatal]] view of a ''[[Sthenurus]]'' sp. skull
  • ''[[The Kongouro from New Holland]]'', a 1772 painting of a kangaroo by [[George Stubbs]]
COMMON NAME FOR SOME MARSUPIALS INDIGENOUS TO AUSTRALIA IN THE FAMILY MACROPODIDAE
Kangaroos; Kangeroo; Kangarooo; Knagaroo; Kangooroo; Baby kangaroo; Mating kangaroos; Sexual behavior of kangaroos; Jumperoo; Reproductive behavior of kangaroos; Kangaro; 🦘; Social behavior of kangaroos; Cultural depictions of kangaroos; Kangaroo tooth; Kangaroo teeth
(kangaroos)
A kangaroo is a large Australian animal which moves by jumping on its back legs. Female kangaroos carry their babies in a pouch on their stomach.
N-COUNT
Kangaroo         
  • A kangaroo and an emu feature on the [[Australian coat of arms]]
  • Two male [[red kangaroo]]s boxing
  • [[Western grey kangaroo]]s
  • A newborn joey sucking on a teat in the pouch
  • The hind leg of a kangaroo
  • Tasmanian eastern grey kangaroo]] in motion
  • Kangaroo meat on sale in Melbourne
  • A "kangaroo crossing" sign on an Australian highway
  • Kangaroo and joey in pouch
  • Kangaroos in their native grassland habitat
  • Red kangaroos, Liverpool Plains, Sydney, ca. 1819
  • A male [[red kangaroo]] grazing
  • A male [[red kangaroo]]
  • [[Aboriginal Australians]] hunting kangaroos
  • A kangaroo in a domestic setting, [[Queensland]], Australia, circa 1900–1910
  • palatal]] view of a ''[[Sthenurus]]'' sp. skull
  • ''[[The Kongouro from New Holland]]'', a 1772 painting of a kangaroo by [[George Stubbs]]
COMMON NAME FOR SOME MARSUPIALS INDIGENOUS TO AUSTRALIA IN THE FAMILY MACROPODIDAE
Kangaroos; Kangeroo; Kangarooo; Knagaroo; Kangooroo; Baby kangaroo; Mating kangaroos; Sexual behavior of kangaroos; Jumperoo; Reproductive behavior of kangaroos; Kangaro; 🦘; Social behavior of kangaroos; Cultural depictions of kangaroos; Kangaroo tooth; Kangaroo teeth
·noun Any one of numerous species of jumping marsupials of the family Macropodidae. They inhabit Australia, New Guinea, and adjacent islands, They have long and strong hind legs and a large tail, while the fore legs are comparatively short and feeble. The giant kangaroo (Macropus major) is the largest species, sometimes becoming twelve or fourteen feet in total length. The tree kangaroos, belonging to the genus Dendrolagus, live in trees; the rock kangaroos, of the genus Petrogale, inhabit rocky situations; and the brush kangaroos, of the genus Halmaturus, inhabit wooded districts. ·see Wallaby.
Kangaroo         
  • A kangaroo and an emu feature on the [[Australian coat of arms]]
  • Two male [[red kangaroo]]s boxing
  • [[Western grey kangaroo]]s
  • A newborn joey sucking on a teat in the pouch
  • The hind leg of a kangaroo
  • Tasmanian eastern grey kangaroo]] in motion
  • Kangaroo meat on sale in Melbourne
  • A "kangaroo crossing" sign on an Australian highway
  • Kangaroo and joey in pouch
  • Kangaroos in their native grassland habitat
  • Red kangaroos, Liverpool Plains, Sydney, ca. 1819
  • A male [[red kangaroo]] grazing
  • A male [[red kangaroo]]
  • [[Aboriginal Australians]] hunting kangaroos
  • A kangaroo in a domestic setting, [[Queensland]], Australia, circa 1900–1910
  • palatal]] view of a ''[[Sthenurus]]'' sp. skull
  • ''[[The Kongouro from New Holland]]'', a 1772 painting of a kangaroo by [[George Stubbs]]
COMMON NAME FOR SOME MARSUPIALS INDIGENOUS TO AUSTRALIA IN THE FAMILY MACROPODIDAE
Kangaroos; Kangeroo; Kangarooo; Knagaroo; Kangooroo; Baby kangaroo; Mating kangaroos; Sexual behavior of kangaroos; Jumperoo; Reproductive behavior of kangaroos; Kangaro; 🦘; Social behavior of kangaroos; Cultural depictions of kangaroos; Kangaroo tooth; Kangaroo teeth
The kangaroo is a marsupial from the family Macropodidae (macropods, meaning "large foot"). In common use the term is used to describe the largest species from this family, the red kangaroo, as well as the antilopine kangaroo, eastern grey kangaroo, and western grey kangaroo.

Wikipedia

KangaRoos

KangaROOS is an American brand of sneaker originally produced from 1979 through the 1980s, with a later revival that continues in present. They were notable for having a small zippered pocket on the side of the shoe, large enough for a small amount of loose change, keys, etc.

KangaROOS were designed by American architect and jogging enthusiast Bob Gamm. Gamm was a running enthusiast who would go ten kilometers a day, but preferred light athletic clothes without pockets. He designed the sneakers for his own personal use as a place to store his keys and money, then marketed them effectively. His marketing design was successful, leading to sales in excess of 700,000 pairs a month by the early 1980s.

Further refinements on the original design led to several significant innovations in athletic footwear. One such innovation, the Dynacoil, was a patented energy release system designed in the mid-1980s by former Nike designer and KangaROOS VP design Ray Tonkel with consultant Al Gross and tested by NASA. Many other athletic shoe manufacturers would later incorporate similar designs into their shoes. In the early- to mid-1980s many USA professional athletes wore ROOS football and baseball shoes as well as shoes for running and training. Notables included Clyde Drexler (Basketball), Walter Payton, O.J. Anderson, William (the Fridge) Perry (football), Ozzie Smith, Vince Coleman and Ron Darling (baseball), Kenyan, Irish and Welsh track stars as part of Team KangaROOS (running).

There was a faddish dimension to the shoes, which became very popular among both casual athletes and American schoolchildren. Gamm himself remained committed to KangaROOS as serious athletic footwear, and in 1985 he worked with a 10,000-square-meter testing facility called the KangaROOS Laboratory & Gymnasium at the University of Illinois. This allowed for refinement and development of the sneakers for many different sports, including American football, basketball, hockey, tennis, and track and field.

By the end of the 1980s, the popularity of the sneakers was on the decline, executives departed the company and KangaROOS were quietly withdrawn from the market. However, nostalgia, combined with an appreciation both of the shoe's athletic design and its ubiquitous pocket, led to a reappearance of the shoe in the late 1990s.

Today, KangaROOS are sold in over sixty countries worldwide. Recent years have witnessed expansion through Central and South America as well as Asia. The footwear moved its strategic focus from performance sports to sports lifestyle footwear, most still bearing the zippered pocket on the side. Some, however, now have a side pouch up on the ankle, which can hold a small wallet.

Examples of use of Kangaroos
1. Under government guidelines, female kangaroos can be targeted but baby kangaroos, or joeys, often die too.
2. Blow for Kangaroos: Andrew Johns is out of the Tri–Nations Andrew Johns has been ruled out of the Kangaroos‘ Gillette Tri–Nations Series matches against Great Britain.
3. Not to mention kangaroos, emus, koalas and other wildlife.
4. To call that a kangaroo court would be an insult to kangaroos.
5. Little is known about the Indonesian kangaroos, known as dusky pademelons, or Thylogale brunii.