How To Use bird's nest In A Sentence
- Ideally you want a bird's nest or pyramid structure that collapses in on itself and keeps burning so you can add new layers of fuel. The Sun
- The guy -- who happens to house a bird's nest and, possibly, a few other zoo animals in the crown of his frizzed-out hairdo -- pretty much stole the movie. Your take on Russell Brand
- If a bird misbehaved itself such as claim or take over another bird's nest in the rookery the general body intervened and that bird was sentenced to isolation and had to go and live on a tree apart from the rest.
- Ideally you want a bird's nest or pyramid structure that collapses in on itself and keeps burning so you can add new layers of fuel. The Sun
- The old pond seems glad to have us go, and the fire-hangbird's nest in the willer-tree waves us good-by. A Little Book of Profitable Tales
- The old pond seems glad to have us go, and the fire-hangbird's nest in the willer tree waves us good-bye. Good Cheer Stories Every Child Should Know
- Now, I had to figure out what to do with my evil, cruel, untameable, bird's nest black hair.
- His decorations added to his queer appearance; scarred by deep gashes on chest and arms, his body was daubed with red ochre, and his ribs picked out with white; on his head a kind of chignon formed of grass, hair, and string held his matted locks in place, like a bird's nest on his crown; he had neither beard nor whiskers, and was not blessed with any article of clothing whatever. Spinifex and Sand
- Then, again, if you fix your eye upon this strange, crested, comblike incrustation on the top of the mass -- this green, barnacled thing, which the Greenlanders call the "crown," and the Southern fishers the "bonnet" of the Right Whale; fixing your eyes solely on this, you would take the head for the trunk of some huge oak, with a bird's nest in its crotch. Moby Dick: or, the White Whale
- The Von Rogoff stable was almost twice as tall as any of the buildings nearby, hollow and hulking, with a deserted bird's nest tucked into the bend of the iron horseshoe nailed to the wood above the huge sliding door.