Under parts white; breast spotted and streaked on the sides.
Under parts white, heavily streaked with blackish and rufous, the marks on breast feathers being wedge-shaped.
Male -- Upper parts olive-green; under parts yellow; a yellow line from the bill passes over and around the eye.
No crest; a white plume from behind eye; above blackish; throat grayer, rest of under parts white.
The top of the head and the sides of the neck are streaked with brown; breast, spotted with dark brown; under parts, white.
Under parts, white with lines of dark brown; central tail feathers long and pointed; no long feathers on the neck.
Forehead and throat brown; upper parts stone-buff, spotted and streaked with black; under parts white; feet yellow.
Like the above, but forehead and crown streaked and mottled with white; colors of bill and feet much duller from September onwards, under parts paler.
Under parts gray, washed with brown and very faintly banded.
Under parts white, tinged with brown on the sides.
Under parts cream-yellowish, whiter on the belly, the throat and breast spotted with black.
Under parts brick-red, except the black and white streaked throat and under the tail.
Head only chestnut, under parts white, outer tail feathers very long and wire-like--H.
Hen: A dull brown bird with dirty white under parts; reddish-white eyebrow and white wing bar.
Birds with dull-coloured upper plumage and bright yellow under parts 1.
Male--Upper parts olive-green; under parts yellow; a yellow line from the bill passes over and around the eye.
Black and white; broad white stripe down back; wings thickly spotted with white; under parts white.
Upper parts barred with black and white; under parts and outer tail feathers white or dingy white; nasal tufts white; forehead and crown black sprinkled with white.
Black on top of the head; neck light buff, streaked with black; under parts white.
The back and head are gray, there is a large patch of chestnut on the fore-neck; under parts white.
These birds have a plumage of bluish gray, the wings being darker and the under parts lightest.
Under parts ochraceous-rufous, fading to tawny on throat, everywhere lighter and more tinged with red than in the Bornean animal.
Size and general appearance both above and below as in the Bornean form of Sciurus notatus, but red of under parts brighter, and cheeks and chin distinctly less fulvous than surrounding parts.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "under parts" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.