She lives in the southern part of Ohio, and she has all winter cardinal grosbeaks, or redbirds as she calls them, blue jays, tufted titmice, and others.
This vociferous warning that no trespassers were allowed sufficed for the blue jays, who would flap sullenly away, but the squirrels were quick to learn that a bark was not a bite.
He took to his glossy wings and, within five minutes, the oak hard by was alive with our whole colony of blue jays, all eying that box and deep in agitated discussion.
Certain large isolated cottonwoods along creeks were favorite stopping places of blue jays (Cyanocitta cristata) which, on trips from one wooded hillside to another, usually perched briefly in the tops of these tall trees.
This oak produces a mast crop used by various birds and mammals, and groves are frequented by blue jays, fox squirrels, white-footed mice and woodrats.
Blue jays, like king-crows and doves, are exceedingly short-tempered when they have young.
Like the young couples that moon about Hyde Park on Sundays, blue jaysdo not mind spooning in public.
Now, I have never seen, but upon this occasion, a large number of blue jays, a dozen or more, fly in a compact flock.
In a few moments, as we skirted a bit of woodland, I remarked: “Blue jays are a feature of this month.
Blue jays came to trees near by, and talked in low tones to each other; then one after another swooped down toward it; then they all squawked at it, and finding this of no avail, they left in a body.
Blue jays, too, came in plenty, selected each his grain and flew away with it.
I got my hint by the accident of some shelled corn being left on the ground before my window, and so attracting a four o'clock party, consisting of blackbirds, blue jays, and doves.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "blue jays" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.