South Atlantic and Gulf States, breeding northto Virginia and Missouri, west to Texas.
Male of a brighter shade of blue than the eastern; found from the Mississippi to the Pacific, breeding north to Kansas, Colorado, and northern California.
Plains to the Atlantic, breeding north to southern Canada.
East of the Rockies, breeding north to Manitoba and New Brunswick; winters in southern U.
Mexico; breeding north to southern Texas and southern Arizona; winters south of United States.
Temperate and sub-tropical America, breeding north to the British Provinces.
Northern North America, breeding north of the United States boundary, and wintering south to Virginia and southern California.
Northern North America, breeding north of the United States except from the mountainous portions of Colorado northward.
Northern hemisphere, breeding north of the Arctic Circle; winter from Mass.
Western North America from the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific, breeding north to Sitka and south chiefly in the mountains to northern Lower California and northern Mexico; south in winter into Mexico.
Western United States, southern British Provinces and plateau of Mexico; breeding north to southern British Columbia, Alberta and southern Assiniboia east to eastern border of Great Plains in South Dakota, Nebraska, etc.
The Baltimore Oriole is found east of the Rockies, breeding north to New Brunswick and Manitoba.
The Carolina Chickadee (Parus carolinensis) is smaller and with no white edges to the wing feathers, and is found in southeastern United States, breeding north to Virginia and Ohio.
It ranges throughout the southern United States, breeding north to New Jersey (and casually farther) and Ohio; and winters in the South Atlantic and Gulf States.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "breeding north" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.