He interested me from the first for a wren is a bird of individuality always, and his voice reminded me, in a feeble way, of the witching notes of the winter wren, the In Normandy the wren is the fire-bringer. In some places the same prohibition extends to the wren, which is popularly believed to be the wife of the robin. The wren is a beautiful little bird, much smaller than the Wilson remarks that they are much more numerous in this country than the common wren is in England. Our common house- wren is a finer singer than the European bird but he flies far to the southward, in winter, and sings Spanish in Mexico and South America. I called the wren as well as I could, and he came nearer and nearer.
#WREN MEANING ARCHIVE#
Nigel, my resident Carolina wren, is singing from his perch on the back fence.ĭallas Blog, Daily News, Dallas Politics, Opinion, and Commentary FrontBurner Blog D Magazine » Blog Archive » The Most Fun You Can Have With A Whip noun any of several small active brown birds of the northern hemisphere with short upright tails they feed on insects.noun English architect who designed more than fifty London churches (1632-1723).noun Small bird of similar appearance to a true wren.įrom WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University.noun Members of a mainly New World passerine bird family Troglodytidae.
See also Pincpinc.įrom Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. These birds are closely allied to the tailor birds, and build their nests in a similar manner.
noun any one of several species of small Asiatic and African singing birds belonging to Prinia and allied genera.These birds are common in Southern Asia and the East Indies. noun any one of numerous species of small timaline birds belonging to Alcippe, Stachyris, Timalia, and several allied genera.noun a small Australian singing bird ( Malurus cyaneus), the male of which in the breeding season is bright blue.noun any one of numerous South American birds of the family Formicaridæ, allied to the ant thrushes.noun (Zoöl.) Any one of numerous species of small singing birds more or less resembling the true wrens in size and habits.noun (Zoöl.) Any one of numerous species of small singing birds belonging to Troglodytes and numerous allied of the family Troglodytidæ.noun (See also cactus-wren, cañon-wren, marsh-wren, reed-wren, tule-wren, willow-wren, wood-wren.)įrom the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.Gould in 1836 as Troglodytes leucogastra, a name subsequently misused to denote the white-bellied wren. noun Uropsila leucogastra, of Oaxaca and Tamaulipas in Mexico, originally described by J.noun The goldcrest or kinglet, Regulus cristatus.noun A very small migratory and insectivorous singing-bird of Great Britain and other European countries, with a slender bill and extremely short tail, and of dark reddish-brown coloration varied with black, inhabiting shrubbery, and belonging to the family Troglodytidæ hence, any member of this family, and, with a qualifying term, one of various other small birds of different families, as certain warblers, kinglets, etc.noun Any of various similar unrelated songbirds.All species but one, which is Eurasian, are found only in the Americas. noun Any of various small brownish songbirds of the family Troglodytidae, having rounded wings, a slender bill, and a short, often erect tail.From The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.