specifically: a frog or toad larva that has a rounded body with a long tail bordered by fins and external gills soon replaced by internal gills and that undergoes a metamorphosis to the adult
Illustration of tadpole
tadpole in stages
Examples of tadpole in a Sentence
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The ranch is one of three areas identified for reintroduction on the island’s northern coast, where artificial ponds receive some 15,000 to 20,000 tadpoles annually.—Adriana Pérez, Chicago Tribune, 3 June 2025 And, as a former tadpole, believe me, losing your tail is a pretty big deal, so, go Terps!—Baltimore Sun Staff, Baltimore Sun, 23 May 2025 One of the most recent is Birch Aquarium at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, which welcomed its first batch of tadpoles late last summer.—Noah Lyons, San Diego Union-Tribune, 31 Mar. 2025 Emptying these water sources also will help eliminate mosquito breeding sites.
Destroy eggs and tadpoles found in these locations.—Arricca Elin Sansone, Southern Living, 8 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for tadpole
Word History
Etymology
Middle English taddepol, from tode toad + polle head
: the larva of a frog or toad that has a rounded body and a long tail, breathes with gills, and lives in water
called alsopollywog
Etymology
Middle English taddepol "tadpole," from tode "toad" and polle "head"
Word Origin
A young tadpole looks like a large head with a tail. In time it will develop back legs and then front legs. Finally it will lose its tail and become a toad or a frog. Our word for this immature form of a toad or frog comes from Middle English taddepol. This word was a combination of two others, tode, meaning "toad," and polle, meaning "head."
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