Common black European thrush.
Sinônimos
Examples for "merle"
Examples for "merle"
1There, awaiting him, was a dainty and temperamental merle, of the Tazewell strain.
2Clinical results were excellent according to a median Merle-d'Aubigné score of 18.
3Merle stood at the window, her face grey in the clammy light.
4Merle had finished dressing, and stood looking at herself in the glass.
5Morey tended bar himself since Merle Squire was at home with Lance.
1Mrs Bridgenorth reads placidly: Collins counts: a blackbird sings in the garden.
2A blackbird darted out of the hedge and away over the fields.
3The bird that most impressed me on my walk was the blackbird.
4Clear was the voice, and as sweet as the April blackbird sings.
5A blackbird had come into the tree and was singing blithely there.
1Another bird I love among the Alps is the dipper or water ouzel.
2The bluebird was in the Yosemite also, and the water-ouzel haunted the lucid waters.
3Closer inspection showed that the bird was a grey-winged ouzel.
4Who can hear the wild song of the ouzel and not feel an answering thrill?
5He is otherwise called the rose-coloured ouzel or starling.'
1Off Merling Rock two days before, they had sighted a half-dozen fishing skiffs.
2There was little direct market impact seen from the attack, although shares of theme park operator Merlin Entertainments MERL.L fell 1.5 percent.
1The voice of the thrushes (and our robin and the European blackbird are thrushes) is flute-like.
2European blackbirds occasionally flock in winter and move from one country or area to another in search of food.
1The morning blackbird on our kitchen windowsill is an odd sort of Turdus merula.
1Colley means a blackbird; water-colley, the water-blackbird or water-ousel-calledthe dipper in the North.
2She was a handsome brunette-indeed, the squire called her a "black ousel."
3Sang I, sweet as the bright-billed ousel, a
4SO they journeyed until they came to the nest of an ousel, and Gwrhyr spoke to her.
5He sang the song of the "ousel cock," but he could not make himself heard.
6The ousel cock, so black of hue
7Under the roots of alders the water-ousel often creeps by day, and the tall heron stalks past at night.
9The Aino believe that the heart of the water-ousel is exceedingly wise, and that in speech the bird is most eloquent.
10The water-ousel plucks moss from the riverbank to build its nest, but is does not improve the moss by plucking it.
11A water-ousel with white breast rises and flies on; again disturbed, he makes a circle, and returns to the stream behind.
12The ousel haunts them, while still hang about their coasts the thin undercut drifts that never quite leave the high altitudes.
13Suddenly, I heard the familiar whir of an ousel's wings, and, looking up, saw my little comforter coming straight from the shore.
14Down in the brush by the river was the happy little water-ousel, as cheerful in his way as the dumpy-built musical canyon wren.
15We now begin to expect our vernal migration of ring-ousels every week.
16They went forward until they came to the Ousel of Cilgwri.