Adult female: Resembles adult male, but crown and back more green and less blue; auriculars with greenish-blue wash.
Adult male in fall and winter:: Similar but feathers of auriculars and hindneck and sometimes crown tipped with dull brown; ashy skirtings of throat and chest more extensive, sometimes nearly concealing the black.
Superciliary stripe cream-buff, spot on upper and under eyelid white; lores and auriculars dusky.
The adult winter plumage is practically the same as the male first winter, the auriculars and transocular stripe usually duller.
The brown feathers of the lores and auriculars are assumed by moult.
A broad yellow band from below eye acrossauriculars to side of neck, separating the black of chin and throat from the black of head.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "auriculars" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.