The Red-backed Shrike comes to Great Britain in May.
And he further notes:--"The Bay-backed Shrike breeds in the neighbourhood of Deesa at the end of the hot weather.
This I know, that from March to August there is never a Rufous-backed Shrike in Bombay.
The Red-backed Shrike, though not generally diffused throughout England, is to certain localities a far from uncommon wanderer, but for some reason it has been scarce in 1908.
The Red-backed Shrike is known to us only as a summer visitor, departing early in autumn.
The red-backed shrike "frequents the sides of woods and high hedgerows, generally in pairs, and may frequently be seen perched on the uppermost branch of an isolated bush, on the look out for prey.
The Red-backed Shrike may be considered a tolerably regular, but not very common, summer visitant to the Channel Islands.
Professor Ansted includes the Red-backed Shrike in his list, and marks it only as occurring in Guernsey.
The bay-backed shrike (Lanius vittatus) is a bird rather smaller than a bulbul.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "backed shrike" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.