Jhore seeing it was a paroquet brought it food, and induced it to come down, and allow him to take it in his hand.
The paroquetalso eyed him narrowly, and was delighted to see his hair trailing on the ground.
On hearing the unusual sound Jhore came out and saw the paroquet who was speaking and whistling.
The paroquet when he had informed himself as to where all Jhore's flutes were kept, one day tied them all up in a bundle, and carried them to the raja.
So the paroquet flew swiftly, and alighted on a tree near to Jhore's house, and began to whistle.
Jhore then ran into his house, and searched for his flute, but as it had been carried away by the paroquet he could not find it, so seizing another he mounted to the roof, and began to play.
The paroquet alighted on a tree near Jhore's palace, and began to whistle.
Carrington from that day could get no more passengers for his paroquet boat.
He was making a larger sail for his paroquet boat.
If you heard wild turkeys gobbling just inside the forest, or an owl hooting, or a paroquet screaming, or a fawn bleating, you were warned never to go there; it was the trick of the Indians.
Suddenly the paroquetbent down its head and uttered a loud scream in his face.
But you were at least four yards away from the impudent paroquet I aimed at, so you see what a horribly bad shot I am.
Arrived beneath the elephant, he uttered a peculiar cry, which did not belong to any human tongue, and which a paroquet alone could have imitated.
It was there that that profound remark was made anent a rather greedy paroquet which belonged to a lady boarder:-- "How well bred!
As for his aunt, she thought too little to love much; Marius was no longer for her much more than a vague black form; and she eventually came to occupy herself with him much less than with the cat or the paroquet which she probably had.
Paroquet People=, settlement in Shumopavi of the =8=: 27.
I first met Bâyan the Paroquet some six months before his death, when I was making my way across the Peninsula, viâ the Slim Mountains, in 1887.
Among the most spirited and delicately executed specimens of ancient art found in the mounds, is that of the paroquet here presented.
The presence of a carving of the paroquet in one of the Ohio mounds has been deemed remarkable on account of the supposed extreme southern habitat of that bird.
The paroquet is essentially a southern bird, and though common along the Gulf, is of rare occurrence above the Ohio River.
The Paroquet has paid the penalty of wearing bright plumes, of making a desirable cage-bird, of being destructive to fruit, and of having little fear of man.
This would account for the wild terror just exhibited, which in the case of the paroquet had come to a fatal end.
The paroquet had already joined the macaw, and, as if in imitation of its great congener, flew fluttering among the top branches, in a state of the wildest excitement!
The little paroquet was especially imprudent, recklessly approaching within a few inches of the serpent, and even alighting on the lliana around which it had warped itself.
The screams of the araruna were instantly answered by the little paroquet in a tiny treble, but equally in accents of terror, while both the coaita and ouistiti, chattering in alarm, came bounding up the tree.
But you were at least four yards away from the impudent paroquet I aimed at; so you see what a horribly bad shot I am.
The only species likely to be seen on the Nilgiris at elevations of 4000 feet and upwards is the blue-winged paroquet (Palæornis columboides).
The habits of the slaty-headed paroquet are those of the common green parrot: its cries, however, are less harsh, and it is less aggressively bold.
This is the slaty-headed paroquet (Palæornis schisticeps).
Then a long-tailed paroquetof the most delicate green, and directly after quite a trayful of the most lovely little birds I had ever seen.
Other little folks have written to the editor in much the same strain, so that this month the paroquet will speak for himself.
In some regions, where less than twenty-five years ago we were very plentiful, not a paroquet is now to be seen.
Like the bison, the paroquet has been swept away by the rushing tide of progress, leaving only fading memories where once they were characteristic features of the landscape.
The nesting-habits of the paroquet are in some doubt, but the evidence seems to indicate that the birds may rear their brood either in a cavity in a tree or build a slight nest after the fashion of the mourning-dove.
The breeding season for the alexandrine (Palaeornis eupatrius) and the rose-ringed paroquet (P.
Nor were any sounds heard save the occasional chattering of the paroquet in the dense forest across the river, a mile distant, and yet they appeared to be in the immediate vicinity.
The paroquet and the thrush, the bluebird and goldfinch, fluttered among the thick foliage and trilled their melodies in sweetest cadence.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "paroquet" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.