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		Ask for help > What is the difference between a fin and a flipper?     
			
		 What is the difference between a fin and a flipper? 
		
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 aee.aee
 
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							| What is the difference between a fin and a flipper? 
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							| Dear colleagues,    could you explain the difference between a fin and a flipper? My intuition tells me that a fin is on a shark  (such as a dorsal fin)  and a flipper is a moving part of a water animal (such as dolphin�s flippers or turtle�s flipper).  What about fish, what do we use with fish?   In our language there is no difference between a fin and a flipper.   Thanks in advance.    Mattea  |  4 Feb 2017      
					
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							|   "There aren �t any bones or cartilage in the dorsal fin and flukes. Instead, they �re made up of dense connective tissue."     "The main features of the fish, the fins, are bony fin rays and,  except for the caudal fin, have no direct connection with the  spine."      |  4 Feb 2017     
					
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							| The skeleton of a dolphin shows that the flipper has bones, but there are no bones where the dorsal fin would be. |  4 Feb 2017     
					
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 aee.aee
 
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							| Thank you for your answers.  So, when describing a dolphin, a whale or a turtle, it is best to use the expression flippers and when describing a fish or a shark, it is best to use fins.  I need the descriptions for children in the elementary level;  therefore I don �t want to get too complicated, yet I want to be accurate.    Thanks again.    Mattea  |  4 Feb 2017     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| But a whale has a dorsal fin, too.   Bruce  |  4 Feb 2017     
					
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 aee.aee
 
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							| Thanks to all of you helping me out.    Have a nice day.    |  5 Feb 2017     
					
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