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Example sentences for "buffy"

Lexicographically close words:
buffo; buffoon; buffooneries; buffoonery; buffoons; bug; bugaboo; bugaboos; bugbear; bugbears
  1. Male specimen from Cagayancillo: Bill black, bluish at base; iris dark brown; cere and legs buffy yellow; nails black.

  2. EGGS--Two to four; generally buffy white, heavily marked with chocolate.

  3. Four eggs of light drab, buffy or cream color, sometimes of light brown, are laid, and the breast of the female is found to be bare of feathers when engaged in rearing the young.

  4. EGGS--Three to four; cream buff or buffy white, heavily blotched with deep chocolate.

  5. When he does this, the player so found out becomes Buffy and takes his place.

  6. Worn winter pelage is especially notable for its paleness; the buffy tones are accentuated and the upper parts, especially posteriorly, may even appear fulvous.

  7. All the cover hairs are gray basally; some have a buffy band terminally and others have a buffy subterminal band with a terminal black tip.

  8. Adults white below, tinged with buffy on the breast and sides, and lightly barred with black; above bluish slate, darkest on the crown.

  9. The 6 to 10 eggs are buffy or olive-greenish (2.

  10. The 4 to 7 eggs are buffy white, blotched with brown (2.

  11. Young birds are buffy below, with elongated blackish spots.

  12. Plumage variegated with rufous and blackish above; bright buffy or rufous below, streaked on neck and breast, and barred on the sides with blackish.

  13. Much darker than the last, the markings tending to be buffy white spots on a grayish black ground.

  14. Compactly woven of grasses and lined with down; they lay from eight to as many as thirteen buffy white eggs, size 1.

  15. Of grasses, sometimes, but not always, lined with down; 5 to 8 buffy white eggs (3.

  16. Female mottled brownish, buffy and black, but to be known by the sharply pointed tail feathers and long neck; speculum brownish.

  17. The black, puffy head is adorned with a pair of buffy white ear tufts and the foreneck is a rich chestnut color.

  18. Adults with the shoulders bright reddish-brown; primaries and secondaries barred with black and white; below buffy thickly barred with rusty-brown.

  19. Of grasses on the ground in salt marshes; 6 to 14 buffy eggs, spotted with brown (1.

  20. The bottom is lined with soft downy feathers, and 8 to 15 buffy eggs are laid (2.

  21. Concealed in long grass, lined with feathers; 5 to 8 buffy eggs (2.

  22. Either in hollow trees, or a rude platform of sticks, usually not very high from the ground; eggs buffy white, handsomely blotched with brown (1.

  23. Efforts have been made to get her on it, and when William Buffy came in, it was fully expected that her name would be put down for a couple of hundred a year.

  24. They are usually four in number, buffy white, heavily marked with chocolate.

  25. The nest, lined with leaves, is placed at the base of a tree or stump; the 8-14 buffy eggs are laid in May.

  26. A buffy Sparrow with the underparts sharply streaked with black.

  27. Pale Smoke Gray, rarely tinged with buffy rather than usually tinged with buffy.

  28. Eggs four to six in number; buffy white, streaked and blotched with brown.

  29. Crown blackish with a central buffy stripe; nape brown and gray; sides of head, breast and flanks, buffy without streaks.

  30. In deep, swampy woods, especially common in laurel; of grapevine bark and rootlets lined with fine black roots and hair; the four eggs are white or buffy white with reddish brown spots and blotches.

  31. Easily distinguished from the Barn Swallow by the square tail and light buffy forehead and rump.

  32. Upper parts streaked with black; back chestnut and gray; under parts buffy white; tail rounded.

  33. Upper parts streaked with buff and blackish; below pale buffy with black markings.

  34. The female of this beautiful little Night-jar differs from the male only in having narrow buffy tips to the outer tail feathers instead of broad white ones.

  35. Male with broad white tips to outer tail feathers; female with narrow buffy tips.

  36. Male in summer with the underparts buffy and sides of head marked with black; female, and male in winter, much duller with all bright markings covered with a brownish-gray wash.

  37. Crown buffy with two black stripes; back, wings and tail olive green with no white markings; below buffy white.

  38. Plumage metallic green and purple, heavily spotted above and below with buffy or white.

  39. Leave me Father and Buffy and the boys in India.

  40. She stroked his hair as she asked, "What's the matter, Buffy boy?

  41. With increased wear, the buffy tip is lost.

  42. After examining the original material from Morelos, I find the dorsal color of pallidus to be much closer to a buffy brown than a pale grayish.

  43. Actually, the dorsum is more nearly black and the venter is more buffy than in typical analogous.

  44. In mice in the earlier stages of adulthood, underfur of the dorsum is buffy at the tips and gray basally.

  45. These two specimens, plus the single specimen from Bowie County are all paler with more buffy bellies than either B.

  46. Underside of tail dingy gray or buffy (not white).

  47. Color grayish brown above and dingy (not white) below; tail dingy buffy below and dull rusty brown above.

  48. The principal characters of this species are small size, dark color, short tail, and dingy buffy (not white) undersurface of the tail.

  49. Tail all white or (in some Lepus townsendii) with faint buffy or dusky median line on top but this line not extending on to rump (as in L.

  50. Upper parts grayish brown; tail all white or with dusky or buffy mid-dorsal stripe which does not extend onto back; white in winter in northern parts of its range.

  51. Prolonged wear and fading evidently serve to weaken the intensity of the color tones, more especially the buffy ones.

  52. These three forms are alike in their lack of any cinnamon tinge, this being replaced in two of them by a buffy tinge and in one form by leaden gray.

  53. I've got something ever so much nicer, even, than Fluffy and Buffy for you to bring up.

  54. I mean, the boy is--just like Fluffy and Buffy were when you took them in.

  55. Postorbital mark red; other markings on soft parts cream to buffy yellow.

  56. EGGS--Three or four; pale olive or buffy clay color, spotted with chocolate.

  57. Warbler size; plain brown above; white (or pale yellow) heavily streaked with dusky below; a prominent buffy stripe over eye.

  58. Warbler size; bears general resemblance to Song Sparrow, from which it is clearly distinguished by buffy chest-band, and by narrow, sharp streaks of breast and sides.

  59. Adult female in summer: Above grayish brown or olivaceous; wings and tail dusky rather than black, with white markings rather broader than in male; below whitish with buffy or yellow suffusion brightest on throat and sides.

  60. Young in first plumage: Like female but lighter below and more or less streaky; above somewhat mottled by buffy edgings of feathers.

  61. The dorsum generally was grayish; the top of the rump, buffy gray.

  62. June 3, the darker part of the pelage is Buffy Brown rather than Cream-Buff.

  63. It is clothed with short, dense fur, of a grizzled warm brown colour on the upper parts, and lighter brown or buffy grey, sometimes so pale as to show a distinct line of separation along the sides from the angle of the lips to the thigh.

  64. The dark brown fur of the upper parts is soft and dense; behind the shoulders the hairs have buffy tips.


  65. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "buffy" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.