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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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They were bullying it.
They're eeeeevil.
Are Jackdaws corvids?
(, Thu 22 Jul 2010, 13:40, 1 reply, 16 years ago)
Corvus monedula, so more closely related to carrion crows (corvus corone) than magpies (pica pica).
The one with the best Latin name is the Rook, however: corvus frugilegus.
(, Thu 22 Jul 2010, 13:42, Reply)
I was given a book called Crow Country, ostensibly some photographer's memoirs about the time he spent in Norfolk watching huge flocks of jackdaws and rooks. You'd have thought such a book would be right up my alley. It's just a shame it was fucking boring.
(, Thu 22 Jul 2010, 13:44, Reply)
I think they're humans turned into birds by witches.
Someone just saw me looking at Jackdaws and suggested I take a look at a grackle.
Not as sexy as a Jackdaw.
(, Thu 22 Jul 2010, 13:46, Reply)
(Baby carrion crows also have blue eyes, which is very cute)
I agree about the grackle - pretty plumage, and very crow-like in appearance, but just not quite in the same league.
(, Thu 22 Jul 2010, 13:48, Reply)
but whatever, the overall effect is icy blue.
Look at this factoid:
The sentence "Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz" is a commonly used example of a pangram, (i.e. a sentence that contains all 26 letters of the English alphabet), while the sentence itself is only 31 letters long.
(, Thu 22 Jul 2010, 13:51, Reply)
I'm tenting just looking at it.
And the one further down the page, of the jackdaw in Bushy Park, is as good as any of those 'ORLY' owls.
Like the pangram. I shall have to find a way to use that more often in conversation.
(, Thu 22 Jul 2010, 13:57, Reply)
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