英:[wud θrʌʃ]
美:[wʊd θrʌʃ]
英:[wud θrʌʃ]
美:[wʊd θrʌʃ]
n.
画眉鸟
noun
a large woodland thrush (Hylocichla mustelina) of eastern North America that is rusty brown on the head and back, has white underparts marked with large black spots, and is noted for its loud clear song
The first known use of wood thrush was in 1791
1 In fall, the wood thrush eats the red berries before migrating to the Gulf of Mexico.
2 The wood thrush, whose heralded song is often said to sound like a flute, breeds throughout the eastern United States, but its population has plummeted over the last half century.
3 Along the path hops a tiny wood thrush, the official bird of Washington, D.C.
4 In the fall, many wood thrushes head to the Maya Forest, which spans Mexico, Guatemala and Belize and is one of five major swaths of intact forest remaining in Central America.
5 District of Columbia: Wood thrush The wood thrush is Washington D.C.'s bird.
6 Late American tree sparrows in the Concord area of the Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge and at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, where a yellow warbler and a wood thrush were also tallied.
7 Our robin is in the thrush family, which includes the hermit thrush and wood thrush.
8 Birders call one side of the park Thrush Ridge for the birds — wood thrush, hermit thrush, gray-cheeked thrush and more — that seem to like it there.
9 American thrushes : wood thrush; hermit thrush ; veery.
美洲画眉鸟; 鸫科鸣鸟; 隐士夜鸫;威尔逊鸫.