I don’t use it often anymore but i was so young when i used scratch. I recently was able to log into my old account and see all the projects i made back in the day. When you use it for awhile it starts to become a treasure trove of memories.
Duck is the common name for numerous species of waterfowl in the family Anatidae. Ducks are generally smaller and shorter-necked than swans and geese, which are members of the same family. Divided among several subfamilies, they are a form taxon; they do not represent a monophyletic group (the group of all descendants of a single common ancestral species), since swans and geese are not considered ducks. Ducks are mostly aquatic birds, and may be found in both fresh water and sea water. Ducks are sometimes confused with several types of unrelated water birds with similar forms, such as loons or divers, grebes, gallinules and coots. Etymology The word duck comes from Old English dūce 'diver', a derivative of the verb *dūcan 'to duck, bend down low as if to get under something, or dive', because of the way many species in the dabbling duck group feed by upending; compare with Dutch duiken and German tauchen 'to dive'. Pacific black duck displaying the characteristic upending "duck" This word replaced Old English ened/ænid 'duck', possibly to avoid confusion with other words, such as ende 'end' with similar forms. Other Germanic languages still have similar words for duck, for example, Dutch eend, German Ente and Norwegian and. The word ened/ænid was inherited from Proto-Indo-European; cf. Latin anas "duck", Lithuanian ántis 'duck', Ancient Greek νῆσσα/νῆττα (nēssa/nētta) 'duck', and Sanskrit ātí 'water bird', among others. A duckling is a young duck in downy plumage[1] or baby duck,[2] but in the food trade a young domestic duck which has just reached adult size and bulk and its meat is still fully tender, is sometimes labelled as a duckling. A male is called a drake and the female is called a duck, or in ornithology a hen.[3][4] Taxonomy All ducks belong to the biological order Anseriformes, a group that contains the ducks, geese and swans, as well as the screamers, and the magpie goose.[5] All except the screamers belong to the biological family Anatidae.[5] Within the family, ducks are split into a variety of subfamilies and 'tribes'. The number and composition of these subfamilies and tribes is the cause of considerable disagreement among taxonomists.[5] Some base their decisions on morphological characteristics, others on shared behaviours or genetic studies.[6][7] The number of suggested subfamilies containing ducks ranges from two to five.[8][9] The significant level of hybridisation that occurs among wild ducks complicates efforts to tease apart the relationships between various species.[9] Mallard landing in approach In most modern classifications, the so-called 'true ducks' belong to the subfamily Anatinae, which is further split into a varying number of tribes.[10] The largest of these, the Anatini, contains the 'dabbling' or 'river' ducks - named for their method of feeding primarily at the surface of fresh water.[11] The 'diving ducks', also named for their primary feeding method, make up the tribe Aythyini.[12] The 'sea ducks' of the tribe Mergini are diving ducks which specialise on fish and shellfish and spend a majority of their lives in saltwater.[13] The tribe Oxyurini contains the 'stifftails', diving ducks notable for their small size and stiff, upright tails.[14] A number of other species called ducks are not considered to be 'true ducks', and are typically placed in other subfamilies or tribes. The whistling ducks are assigned either to a tribe (Dendrocygnini) in the subfamily Anatinae or the subfamily Anserinae,[15] or to their own subfamily (Dendrocygninae) or family (Dendrocyganidae).[9][16] The freckled duck of Australia is either the sole member of the tribe Stictonettini in the subfamily Anserinae,[15] or in its own family, the Stictonettinae.[9] The shelducks make up the tribe Tadornini in the family Anserinae in some classifications,[15] and their own subfamily, Tadorninae, in others,[17] while the steamer ducks are either placed in the family Anserinae in the tribe Tachyerini[15] or lumped with the shelducks in the tribe Tadorini.[9] The perching ducks make up in the tribe Cairinini in the subfamily Anserinae in some classifications, while that tribe is eliminated in other classifications and its members assigned to the tribe Anatini.[9] The torrent duck is generally included in the subfamily Anserinae in the monotypic tribe Merganettini,[15] but is sometimes included in the tribe Tadornini.[18] The pink-eared duck is sometimes included as a true duck either in the tribe Anatini[15] or the tribe Malacorhynchini,[19] and other times is included with the shelducks in the tribe Tadornini.[15] Morphology Male Mandarin duck The overall body plan of ducks is elongated and broad, and they are also relatively long-necked, albeit not as long-necked as the geese and swans. The body shape of diving ducks varies somewhat from this in being more rounded. The bill is usually broad and contains serrated pectens, which are particularly well defined in the filter-feeding species. In the case of some fishing species the bill is long and strongly serrated. The scaled legs are strong and well developed, and generally set far back on the body, more so in the highly aquatic species. The wings are very strong and are generally short and pointed, and the flight of ducks requires fast continuous strokes, requiring in turn strong wing muscles. Three species of steamer duck are almost flightless, however. Many species of duck are temporarily flightless while moulting; they seek out protected habitat with good food supplies during this period. This moult typically precedes migration. The drakes of northern species often have extravagant plumage, but that is moulted in summer to give a more female-like appearance, the "eclipse" plumage. Southern resident species typically show less sexual dimorphism, although there are exceptions such as the paradise shelduck of New Zealand, which is both strikingly sexually dimorphic and in which the female's plumage is brighter than that of the male. The plumage of juvenile birds generally resembles that of the female. Female ducks have evolved to have a corkscrew shaped vagina to prevent rape. Distribution and habitat See also: List of Anseriformes by population Flying steamer ducks in Ushuaia, Argentina Ducks have a cosmopolitan distribution, and are found on every continent except Antarctica.[5] Several species manage to live on subantarctic islands, including South Georgia and the Auckland Islands.[20] Ducks have reached a number of isolated oceanic islands, including the Hawaiian Islands, Micronesia and the Galápagos Islands, where they are often vagrants and less often residents.[21][22] A handful are endemic to such far-flung islands.[21] A brown duck in a fast-flowing stream Female mallard in Cornwall, UK. Some duck species, mainly those breeding in the temperate and Arctic Northern Hemisphere, are migratory; those in the tropics are generally not. Some ducks, particularly in Australia where rainfall is erratic, are nomadic, seeking out the temporary lakes and pools that form after localised heavy rain.[23] Behaviour Feeding Pecten along the bill Mallard duckling preening Ducks eat food sources such as grasses, aquatic plants, fish, insects, small amphibians, worms, and small molluscs. Dabbling ducks feed on the surface of water or on land, or as deep as they can reach by up-ending without completely submerging.[24] Along the edge of the bill, there is a comb-like structure called a pecten. This strains the water squirting from the side of the bill and traps any food. The pecten is also used to preen feathers and to hold slippery food items. Diving ducks and sea ducks forage deep underwater. To be able to submerge more easily, the diving ducks are heavier than dabbling ducks, and therefore have more difficulty taking off to fly. A few specialized species such as the mergansers are adapted to catch and swallow large fish. The others have the characteristic wide flat bill adapted to dredging-type jobs such as pulling up waterweed, pulling worms and small molluscs out of mud, searching for insect larvae, and bulk jobs such as dredging out, holding, turning head first, and swallowing a squirming frog. To avoid injury when digging into sediment it has no cere, but the nostrils come out through hard horn. The Guardian published an article advising that ducks should not be fed with bread because it damages the health of the ducks and pollutes waterways.[25] Breeding A Muscovy duckling Ducks generally only have one partner at a time, although the partnership usually only lasts one year.[26] Larger species and the more sedentary species (like fast-river specialists) tend to have pair-bonds that last numerous years.[27] Most duck species breed once a year, choosing to do so in favourable conditions (spring/summer or wet seasons). Ducks also tend to make a nest before breeding, and, after hatching, lead their ducklings to water. Mother ducks are very caring and protective of their young, but may abandon some of their ducklings
I started using scratch in 2015 and I was around 6 or 7 years at the time. And a lot of my projects are missing but the ones that have stayed up are so bad
My project 2020: drive.google.com/file/d/1R9v92ATUXrEJuXDz1hIW9XfIxz_78aEM/view?usp=share_link The same project but remastered during winter holiday 2021: scratch.mit.edu/projects/620531447/
I don’t use it often anymore but i was so young when i used scratch. I recently was able to log into my old account and see all the projects i made back in the day. When you use it for awhile it starts to become a treasure trove of memories.
I'm still inside these days. I really hope it does not happen to me. I'd say I'm decent at it and I don't want to lose my skills
I'm now a reaction UA-camr 🙃
All games are on my scratch profile: scratch.mit.edu/users/Charlesbel/
Hi
Aw ma gawd...
yes!
RIP
Ima donut not wonter
who here has seen the duck who stalks dontask?
Quack!
me
Me
Me
Me
2:26 2:52 the duck tho😂
Quack
He got sponsered by the subscribe button! So impressive!
😆
Lol
bro got sponsered by ohio 💀
@@duck4738 bro no
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2:53 wtf is that in the background of his camera
3:48 something disconnected
2:34 that duck was truly inspiring!
Quack!
!!FIRST!!
This reaction channel needs merch, first shirt should say “my heads too fat, we’ve got an inventory”
Physics are totally on point on that crab platformer
lol
WHAT THE DUCK DOING 2:26 Look at his cam
🐤🦆
2:58
Waterflame RN: Ok Rob we have a problem with a certain music.
look at his webam LOL 2:18
Duck
I have a similar experience, my Scratch profile is just as old by like a month 💀 except the thing is the cringe didn’t stop until like 2019 😭
Mine hasn't stopped :/
ok
No they look really amazing
thx
Why was there a person wearing a duck costume at 2:34?
Why wouldn't there be?
2:52 who is that in the duck mask?
A duck
@@donut_ask a duck indeed
2:35 nobody noticed the duck?
Yes, almost every comment
2:33 duck
Quack 🦆
Amazing video ❤❤❤❤
😁
Did anyone see the duck at 2:35
Quack!
I just got recommend first time being here!
👋
aww look at that intro. that is, that is, that is an intro (3:38)
Noooooooooo
OMG THANKS DONUTASK
why was there something behind you in (2:25
🐤
@@donut_ask OMG THIS IS MY FIRST TIME A UA-camR REPLIED TO ME YOU MADE MY DAY
W undertated content creator
Thanks
2:34 pov: duck cam
🐤🐥
@@donut_ask 🐤🐥 🦆
2:52 why have a duck?
Quack!
Who was the duck behind you in cake clicker
Duck is the common name for numerous species of waterfowl in the family Anatidae. Ducks are generally smaller and shorter-necked than swans and geese, which are members of the same family. Divided among several subfamilies, they are a form taxon; they do not represent a monophyletic group (the group of all descendants of a single common ancestral species), since swans and geese are not considered ducks. Ducks are mostly aquatic birds, and may be found in both fresh water and sea water.
Ducks are sometimes confused with several types of unrelated water birds with similar forms, such as loons or divers, grebes, gallinules and coots.
Etymology
The word duck comes from Old English dūce 'diver', a derivative of the verb *dūcan 'to duck, bend down low as if to get under something, or dive', because of the way many species in the dabbling duck group feed by upending; compare with Dutch duiken and German tauchen 'to dive'.
Pacific black duck displaying the characteristic upending "duck"
This word replaced Old English ened/ænid 'duck', possibly to avoid confusion with other words, such as ende 'end' with similar forms. Other Germanic languages still have similar words for duck, for example, Dutch eend, German Ente and Norwegian and. The word ened/ænid was inherited from Proto-Indo-European; cf. Latin anas "duck", Lithuanian ántis 'duck', Ancient Greek νῆσσα/νῆττα (nēssa/nētta) 'duck', and Sanskrit ātí 'water bird', among others.
A duckling is a young duck in downy plumage[1] or baby duck,[2] but in the food trade a young domestic duck which has just reached adult size and bulk and its meat is still fully tender, is sometimes labelled as a duckling.
A male is called a drake and the female is called a duck, or in ornithology a hen.[3][4]
Taxonomy
All ducks belong to the biological order Anseriformes, a group that contains the ducks, geese and swans, as well as the screamers, and the magpie goose.[5] All except the screamers belong to the biological family Anatidae.[5] Within the family, ducks are split into a variety of subfamilies and 'tribes'. The number and composition of these subfamilies and tribes is the cause of considerable disagreement among taxonomists.[5] Some base their decisions on morphological characteristics, others on shared behaviours or genetic studies.[6][7] The number of suggested subfamilies containing ducks ranges from two to five.[8][9] The significant level of hybridisation that occurs among wild ducks complicates efforts to tease apart the relationships between various species.[9]
Mallard landing in approach
In most modern classifications, the so-called 'true ducks' belong to the subfamily Anatinae, which is further split into a varying number of tribes.[10] The largest of these, the Anatini, contains the 'dabbling' or 'river' ducks - named for their method of feeding primarily at the surface of fresh water.[11] The 'diving ducks', also named for their primary feeding method, make up the tribe Aythyini.[12] The 'sea ducks' of the tribe Mergini are diving ducks which specialise on fish and shellfish and spend a majority of their lives in saltwater.[13] The tribe Oxyurini contains the 'stifftails', diving ducks notable for their small size and stiff, upright tails.[14]
A number of other species called ducks are not considered to be 'true ducks', and are typically placed in other subfamilies or tribes. The whistling ducks are assigned either to a tribe (Dendrocygnini) in the subfamily Anatinae or the subfamily Anserinae,[15] or to their own subfamily (Dendrocygninae) or family (Dendrocyganidae).[9][16] The freckled duck of Australia is either the sole member of the tribe Stictonettini in the subfamily Anserinae,[15] or in its own family, the Stictonettinae.[9] The shelducks make up the tribe Tadornini in the family Anserinae in some classifications,[15] and their own subfamily, Tadorninae, in others,[17] while the steamer ducks are either placed in the family Anserinae in the tribe Tachyerini[15] or lumped with the shelducks in the tribe Tadorini.[9] The perching ducks make up in the tribe Cairinini in the subfamily Anserinae in some classifications, while that tribe is eliminated in other classifications and its members assigned to the tribe Anatini.[9] The torrent duck is generally included in the subfamily Anserinae in the monotypic tribe Merganettini,[15] but is sometimes included in the tribe Tadornini.[18] The pink-eared duck is sometimes included as a true duck either in the tribe Anatini[15] or the tribe Malacorhynchini,[19] and other times is included with the shelducks in the tribe Tadornini.[15]
Morphology
Male Mandarin duck
The overall body plan of ducks is elongated and broad, and they are also relatively long-necked, albeit not as long-necked as the geese and swans. The body shape of diving ducks varies somewhat from this in being more rounded. The bill is usually broad and contains serrated pectens, which are particularly well defined in the filter-feeding species. In the case of some fishing species the bill is long and strongly serrated. The scaled legs are strong and well developed, and generally set far back on the body, more so in the highly aquatic species. The wings are very strong and are generally short and pointed, and the flight of ducks requires fast continuous strokes, requiring in turn strong wing muscles. Three species of steamer duck are almost flightless, however. Many species of duck are temporarily flightless while moulting; they seek out protected habitat with good food supplies during this period. This moult typically precedes migration.
The drakes of northern species often have extravagant plumage, but that is moulted in summer to give a more female-like appearance, the "eclipse" plumage. Southern resident species typically show less sexual dimorphism, although there are exceptions such as the paradise shelduck of New Zealand, which is both strikingly sexually dimorphic and in which the female's plumage is brighter than that of the male. The plumage of juvenile birds generally resembles that of the female. Female ducks have evolved to have a corkscrew shaped vagina to prevent rape.
Distribution and habitat
See also: List of Anseriformes by population
Flying steamer ducks in Ushuaia, Argentina
Ducks have a cosmopolitan distribution, and are found on every continent except Antarctica.[5] Several species manage to live on subantarctic islands, including South Georgia and the Auckland Islands.[20] Ducks have reached a number of isolated oceanic islands, including the Hawaiian Islands, Micronesia and the Galápagos Islands, where they are often vagrants and less often residents.[21][22] A handful are endemic to such far-flung islands.[21]
A brown duck in a fast-flowing stream
Female mallard in Cornwall, UK.
Some duck species, mainly those breeding in the temperate and Arctic Northern Hemisphere, are migratory; those in the tropics are generally not. Some ducks, particularly in Australia where rainfall is erratic, are nomadic, seeking out the temporary lakes and pools that form after localised heavy rain.[23]
Behaviour
Feeding
Pecten along the bill
Mallard duckling preening
Ducks eat food sources such as grasses, aquatic plants, fish, insects, small amphibians, worms, and small molluscs.
Dabbling ducks feed on the surface of water or on land, or as deep as they can reach by up-ending without completely submerging.[24] Along the edge of the bill, there is a comb-like structure called a pecten. This strains the water squirting from the side of the bill and traps any food. The pecten is also used to preen feathers and to hold slippery food items.
Diving ducks and sea ducks forage deep underwater. To be able to submerge more easily, the diving ducks are heavier than dabbling ducks, and therefore have more difficulty taking off to fly.
A few specialized species such as the mergansers are adapted to catch and swallow large fish.
The others have the characteristic wide flat bill adapted to dredging-type jobs such as pulling up waterweed, pulling worms and small molluscs out of mud, searching for insect larvae, and bulk jobs such as dredging out, holding, turning head first, and swallowing a squirming frog. To avoid injury when digging into sediment it has no cere, but the nostrils come out through hard horn.
The Guardian published an article advising that ducks should not be fed with bread because it damages the health of the ducks and pollutes waterways.[25]
Breeding
A Muscovy duckling
Ducks generally only have one partner at a time, although the partnership usually only lasts one year.[26] Larger species and the more sedentary species (like fast-river specialists) tend to have pair-bonds that last numerous years.[27] Most duck species breed once a year, choosing to do so in favourable conditions (spring/summer or wet seasons). Ducks also tend to make a nest before breeding, and, after hatching, lead their ducklings to water. Mother ducks are very caring and protective of their young, but may abandon some of their ducklings
2:52
am I the only one that noticed that in the face cam?
🦆
No🦆
🦆
🦆 no I sor it asweell
no
Yoooo loved the video
Thanks 😊
whats that duck in the backround?
Quack!
2:52 who is in the back?
A duck
Why is the duck behind you
Why not!
I started using scratch in 2015 and I was around 6 or 7 years at the time. And a lot of my projects are missing but the ones that have stayed up are so bad
sssssss
The graphics 🤩😍🤩😍🤩😍🤩😍🤩😍🤩😍🤩😍😍😍🤩😍
lol
2:31 Did you see that duck too?
What duck? There is nothing in the background at all
Whose the duck behind you 2:51
I need advice for my channel what do you suggest for me.
Subscribed! First step is make some more videos :)
@@donut_ask Thanks
The old days
Who the hell was that next to him at 2:35 wearing a duck head??????????
A duck
@@donut_ask Oh. Well that makes sense.
In cake slapper, there was a duck behind you 😂
I’ve start scratch 2months ago
set underrated to 100
lol
cool
Thank you
There was a duck in your camera at 2:52
bro these are like better than my first projects
2:49 why is there a chicken
Quack!
Ty for commenting on one of my vids :)
Np
Whats that behind you??? 2:34
🐥
uh why is there a duck in his face cam at 2:34
🐤
2:52 whats that duck doing???????
Quack
"ngl, old scratch projects most likely to lag"
-12 xfohv
My old scratch projects suck I joined month’s ago😕
Mine still suck, and I've been on scratch for years
4:09 tbh puzzled actually looks good. the only problem is the textures (no offense).
Thanks. And yeah I suck at art
@@donut_ask lol
@@donut_askso do i
2:50 what is that on his webcam 🤨
A duck
2:34 Mr duck was stalking u
My project 2020: drive.google.com/file/d/1R9v92ATUXrEJuXDz1hIW9XfIxz_78aEM/view?usp=share_link
The same project but remastered during winter holiday 2021: scratch.mit.edu/projects/620531447/
0:00 hello timed users!
Hello 0 people who use timed comments
You should recreate some
Yes
@@donut_ask hmm yes
2:25 *a new creature has spawned near donutask*
Duck
look at donut's facecam in 2:34
Why has nobody mentioned the duck man?
I feel like a lot of people have
I like how I just engorged the duck
There's a duck 2:34 .
🦢🦆🐣🐤🐥
Are you in Antarctica?
Yes
@@donut_ask How?
who was that 2:36
cool
:awesome:
Swag 🗣
The duck in the back
Fortunately for me, I have an auto - clicker on my PC!
3:05
Actual song ua-cam.com/video/MQ7vI7cdYJY/v-deo.html
this is so funny im giving a sub
Thank you
Me 2
Wow this guy is so cool
2:52 Who the heck is that bro?
A duck
gimme the links the games ill make them good
They are all at scratch.mit.edu/users/Charlesbel/
2:34 A duck??
yes
this guy is so underrated
Anyone going to notice duck in background? 🤨 2:35
🦆
Cool
Thanks
you need more subs
Thanks :)
2:36 Duck🦆🦆🦆🦆???
Duck
9:40 a duck behind u!
🐥
0:43 C R A P P L A T F O R M E R
💩🦀
...all of thease are better then ANY of mine are :(
2:33 look behind you
🐥🐤🦆
Look at his camera 😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳 2:51
My old games were so bad
Pause 2:53
🐥🐤🦆
2:25 duck 🐤
Duck!
You thought that was cringe, I used to be one of those people who would make tvo kids logo bloopers and numberblocks stuff and I was like 11 like wat
now i'm just powerpuff animator
DUCK AT 2:35!!!!!! lol
2:35 (ill see if you can find it)
Quack!
and also there is no music in this video
Is your name Charlie
Swag
:)
Do a video where you make these better
Good idea :)
Bro that duck in background
🦆
nice.
Thanks :)
2:24 who tf is that
A duck
Woooooow
have you ever played minecraft???
Yes