Adult female in winter: Plumage ofupperparts more or less margined with rusty or ochraceous; sides of head and underparts tinged with buffy.
Adults in winter: Upperparts tinged with brown, the rufous feathers, especially on belly, with white skirtings.
Upperparts olive-brown; below, buffy-gray; a small black mark on the ears above the iridescent neck patch.
Upperparts blackish, edged with bright chestnut; breast and sides ashy-gray, conspicuously streaked with dusky.
Upperparts uniform olive; eye-ring buff; breast and sides of the throat deeper than in the Gray-cheeked Thrush.
The upperparts are brighter reddish brown than in any of our other Sparrows, and the bill is 'pinker.
The upperpartsare grayish brown marked with white; the throat is white, rest of underparts barred with grayish brown and white.
Throat white, upperparts bright, light olive-green, without tinge of brown as in the Alder Flycatcher.
The color of the upperparts alone amply suffices to distinguish spectabilis and deserti; but the different coloration of the tail is the most obvious diagnostic feature.
A handsome species (see frontispiece) with ruddy underparts, grayishupperparts and a long graduated tail.
Much larger than the last; equal in size and similar to articola but with the throat yellowish and the upperparts darker and brighter.
This variety has the upperparts pale brownish and not streaked; throat and forehead yellowish.
This peculiar species has the entire head bright yellow and the throat black; upperparts grayish, underparts white.
These birds have greenish upperparts and sides, yellowish underparts, and an ashy gray head, neck and breast; they have a complete whitish ring about the eye, this distinguishing them in any plumage from the two following species.
It is a handsome bird, the feathers of the grayishupperparts being edged with white, thus giving it the appearance of being barred.
The upperparts of this variety are very pale pinkish brown.
This species has the upperparts variegated with reddish brown, black and white; the underparts are pure white, except for a black patch on the throat, branching upward to the eye and back to the sides of the breast.
Ground color of upperparts pale raw-umber brown, mixed with pale grayish; chest and neck barred with pale brownish ochre and black.
Ground color of upperparts rusty, mixed with pale grayish buff, narrowly and irregularly barred with black; chest and neck coarsely barred with rusty and black.
Outer tail-feather largely white; next one only tipped with white; upperparts grayish brown indistinctly streaked; underparts rich buff, breast and sides streaked with blackish.
Ground color of upperparts deep umber-brown, very finely and densely vermiculated; chest barred with bright tawny brown and black.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "upperparts" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.