How To Use Baby bird In A Sentence

  • On this first day of summer, we are well into the season when baby birds fledge - a desperate time of survival for many young birds.
  • A smiling Becky sat the baby bird in the grass in front of the lilacs, and quietly moved away.
  • In fetal position, they uncurled and curled, then sat up like baby birds begging for worms.
  • He hovered anxiously about while she fed the greedy fledglings with the soft pulpy mass she prepared so carefully, and was always ready to look after the "bambini," as Maria insisted on calling the baby birds. Chico: the Story of a Homing Pigeon
  • Once you touch the delicate baby birdling, once you try too hard to help it live, you risk having it abandoned by its own mother and dying; helping can actually cause harm. Layla Revis: Mrs. Fix It
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  • Measuring up at nearly 5 feet tall, and native to the East African White Nile marshes, the shoebill has a wingspan of as much as 10 feet -- and a reputation for violent nocturnal feedings of fish, turtles, baby birds, and small crocodiles; however, with as few as 5,000 left in the world, the TreeHugger
  • I call fretfully as my baby birds, sunblocked and behatted flit off down the street. Erika Schickel: Baby Steps
  • Oh hey! Have you seen my baby bird?
  • On Friday morning, Sheree awakened to delightful sunbeams pouring into the room from the window and the sound of baby birds chirping in their nest.
  • Sometimes you might encounter a fox, and I lost a whole morning's work watching a mother bird feeding her baby birds the figs from my fig tree.
  • In fetal position, they uncurled and curled, then sat up like baby birds begging for worms.
  • I am frequently asked whether handling a baby bird will keep the mother from feeding it.
  • Bare branches grow out of one end, while shoots sprout out from the other, smiling snakes wriggle around and a baby bird emerges from an egg.
  • In time, the growing embryos will accumulate enough mass to ignite and explode out of their cores like baby birds busting out of their eggs.
  • A NEW brooder room for incubating eggs and hand-rearing baby birds is to be formally opened at the Johannesburg Zoo.
  • She's watching over some baby birds until the mother gets back; she's cleaning out her tree house and repairing a bird house.
  • They all turned to look at Ursula Harris, whose face was crimson, her chestnut hair in disarray like a baby bird's fluff, whose laugh was audible even here, a high garrulous tinkle.
  • Our flight attendant didn't have to ask to gauge my level of interest in the complimentary muffin - my demeanor wasn't far from that of a baby bird pining for a little extra minnow.
  • There comes a point, alas, when a baby bird, trying its wings, finds it has planed down off the roof, and can't get back up again.
  • A new brooder room for incubating eggs and hand-rearing baby birds is to be formally opened at the Johannesburg Zoo during the Sasol Bird Fair on 3 and 4 September.
  • Out of them came only egg yolk and egg white, firm and opaque or runny and transparent to be sure, but never any sort of baby bird.
  • Scientists believe the normally docile beasts are eating the baby birds to make up for deficiencies in their diet on Rum, or even using them as a form of medicine.
  • It seems once blacksnakes learn its easier to get baby birds, be it chickens or bluebirds, they don't try for mice any longer.

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