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stonechat
[ stohn-chat ]
noun
- any of several small Old World birds, especially of the genus Saxicola, as S. torquata.
stonechat
/ ˈəʊˌʃæ /
noun
- an Old World songbird, Saxicola torquata, having a black plumage with a reddish-brown breast: subfamily Turdinae (thrushes)
Word History and Origins
Origin of stonechat1
Word History and Origins
Origin of stonechat1
Example Sentences
"The ground nesting birds, like the skylarks and the meadow pipits, the wrens and stonechats, they'll have lost their nests and eggs."
But then suddenly, Graeme's efforts pay off as we sight a stonechat, the feathered fiend who had evaded us earlier, sitting happily atop a fence post.
Land-sparing urban areas are breeding grounds for birds that lay many eggs, use open nests more frequently, and have short life cycles, such as stonechats, chiffchaffs and crested larks.
Ornithologist Barbara Hall from the University of Groningen and her colleagues, for example, studied European stonechats, small songbirds that they caught and then bred in captivity.
The stonechat is “the very acme of alertness.”
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