The color of the venter of ochrogaster is usually fulvous or cinnamon instead of grayish as in pennsylvanicus, but there is variation in this respect too; some prairie voles also have a grayish venter.
The color on the dorsum is dark gray with a grizzled appearance from the mixture of black and fulvous on the long hairs; the venter is paler, sometimes pale fulvous or cinnamon.
In the Southern States the black variety prevails; farther north the fulvousand gray variety, called the cat squirrel, is more common.
The seventh is chipped from pale fulvous chalcedony and is from the surface at the same place.
This is nearly related to the two foregoing species, but the ground-color is darker fulvous than in dymas, the markings are slight as in that species, and the arrangement of the spots and bands on the under side is similar.
The dark markings on the upper side are much heavier than in either of the two preceding species, and the fulvous spots are smaller, the marginal crescents more regular and distinct.
The ground-color is bright reddish-fulvous on the upper side.
At the end of the cell in the fore wing there are two black lines inclosing paler fulvous spots, and both wings near the base have some curved black lines.
The male is bright reddish-fulvous on the upper side, slightly obscured by fuscous at the base.
This obscure little insect is light fulvous on the upper side, with the costa of the hind wing somewhat broadly marked with leaden gray; on the under side the fore wings are brighter fulvous, with the inner margin laved with dark gray.
The wings of both sexes on the under side are uniformly pale fulvous or buff, marked with dark brown or blackish at the base of the fore wings.
The upper side of the hind wings is black, glossed with blue, having a marginal row of fulvous and a submarginal row of cream-colored spots.
The outer margin of the secondaries is not as sharply defined as in that species, but shades insensibly into the lighter greenish-fulvous of the basal part of the wing.
Much like the preceding species, but readily distinguished from it by the paler yellowish-fulvous light markings of the upper side of the wings.
The wings are bright fulvous on the upper side, with the black markings much as in A.
Bright fulvous on the upper side, with the costa, the outer margins, the base, and the veins of both fore and hind wings fuscous.
A rather small species, with light-fulvous fore wings, shading into yellow toward the outer margins; the dark markings slight, but deep in color.
Pale fulvous on the upper side, with the dark markings on the inner half of the wing narrow, but more or less confluent.
The wings on the under side are yellow, shaded with fulvous on the primaries, on which the dark markings are heavy.
On the under side the fore wings are fulvous at the base, broadly dark brown beyond the middle.
The Red Gulf Fritillary had heard it, and here she was, all in her fine fulvous frock besmocked with black velvet, and her farthingale spangled with silver.
The only real difference is the color; ringtails from Texas are deep fulvous instead of grayish as is astutus from the Distrito Federal and Veracruz.
But the specimen from Veracruz has much fulvous and on the other hand specimens from Coahuila are more grayish than those from Texas.
The Fulvous Duck is much more abundant in the United States than the Black-bellied, and is casually found as far north as Kansas and Nevada, while it is regularly found in Texas and Louisiana, where it is known as the Long-legged Duck.
The breast and under parts are barred with transverse markings of mixed fulvous and brown, and develop a rusty red colouring on the abdomen and inner thighs.
It is conspicuous also by its very marked colouring, which is in young birds almost black on the upper parts, each feather, however, being tipped with fulvous brown.
The upper parts are dull and rather pale brown, the feathers margined, and in some parts barred, with light fulvous buff.
The upper plumage is a rather dull dark brown, with fulvous and rufous buff edgings.
Female similar, but the white on the throat, wings, and tail replaced by fulvous and less extended.
The Whistling Duck, in its chestnut and fulvous plumage, is a handsome bird and somewhat singular in appearance, especially when seen in a large body on the ground.
Shell armed with spinous tubercles, pale fulvous with remote angular waved lines of brown; spiral whorls plaited; pillar with four plaits.
Above blackish brown, beneath fulvous yellow; sides of the body lineated with black lines, base of the quills and tips of the laternal tail feathers pure white, sides of the neck, with a naked space.
Fulvous brown: pillar white, with about four lengthened plaits, and intermediate shortened ones between them, inner margin of the lip brown.
The fulvous tree-duck ranges on our hunting grounds as far north as Sacramento, where occasionally one is killed.
From five to fifteen and, in the case of the Fulvous Tree Duck, possibly as many as thirty eggs are laid.
The fulvous is the more common of the two species in the United States.
The fulvousalso occurs there and in Florida with occasional stragglers further north along both coasts and the Mississippi Valley.
It differs also from the other spots by being bordered on its upper side with some dull fulvous shading.
It is also narrowly edged on the lower side with a fulvous tint.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "fulvous" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.