Definition & Betydelse | Engelska ordet BROWNER


BROWNER

Definition av BROWNER

  1. böjningsform av brown

Antal bokstäver

7

Är palindrom

Nej

16
BR
BRO
ER
NE
NER

1

1

192
BE
BEN
BER


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Exempel på hur man kan använda BROWNER i en mening

  • Females are browner and duller than males, and young birds may lack the pale chest markings altogether.
  • They vary greatly in plumage tone, with some birds greyer and others browner, but this variation has not been observed to be sex- or age-related.
  • The nominate subspecies is similar to the Siberian chiffchaff, but with a finer darker bill, browner upperparts and buff flanks; its song is almost identical to the common chiffchaff, but the call is a weak psew.
  • Juveniles are similar to winter adults but browner with buff fringes to the wing-coverts and scapulars and a grey-brown tip to the tail.
  • The male has a black head and throat, white neck collar and underparts, and a heavily streaked grey back (reed bunting has a browner back).
  • Compared to the icterine warbler, the upper parts are rather browner and the under parts rather yellower.
  • The western olivaceous warbler is larger and has a browner tinge to the upperparts than the eastern olivaceous warbler.
  • The western olivaceous warbler differs from this species in being larger and having a browner tinge to the upperparts; it also has a larger bill.
  • The eastern Bonelli's warbler lacks the browner tinge to the upperparts that the western Bonelli's warbler has; it sometimes has a greenish tinge instead.
  • The female is duller and greyer, and winter and juvenile birds are browner, apart from a hint of rufous on the head.
  • It is very similar to the rock partridge (Alectoris graeca) with which it has been lumped in the past but is browner on the back and has a yellowish tinge to the foreneck.
  • Juveniles tend to have browner plumage reminiscent in colour and pattern to a buzzard Buteo spp but with the broad winged, long tailed silhouette of an accipiter.
  • It has black lores (cheeks) and a distinctive, large and conspicuous broken white eye ring, Females and juveniles are similar, but are browner on the wings and back and are not as boldly or brightly marked.
  • It has a blue-black back and crown with browner wings and tail, a red face and throat, and dusky underparts.
  • The subspecies in the southern Western Ghats bourdilloni has a duller sooty-black hood, browner underside and the upper parts are more olive.
  • They describe poonensis as paler and browner above, with a deeper bill, and mostly pale lower mandible, a more mottled throat, breast and flanks (in fresh plumage), less contrastingly white "spectacles" and throat, and perhaps a more rounded wing.
  • Immatures resemble non-breeding adults but are darker and browner, and the bill is pink till the second winter.
  • In the winter, the coat is browner and the underside is grayer; also, the ears appear even tuftier than they do in summer.
  • Females have browner crowns, they have less contrasting facial markings and more rounded scapulars, the under tail coverts are not vermiculated, and the wing is less glossy and colorful than that of an adult male.
  • Juveniles are duller and browner than adults, with a buffier throat, a tawny tinge to the breast's barring, and black bars or spots on the undertail coverts.


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