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tinamou
[ tin-uh-moo ]
noun
- any of several birds of the family Tinamidae, of South and Central America, related to the ratite birds but superficially resembling the gallinaceous birds.
tinamou
/ ˈtɪnəˌmuː /
noun
- any bird of the order Tinamiformes of Central and South America, having small wings, a heavy body, and an inconspicuous plumage
Word History and Origins
Origin of tinamou1
Word History and Origins
Origin of tinamou1
Example Sentences
Animals such as the tinamou, a bird the local Indigenous people consider sacred, even scarcer.
Panguana’s name comes from the local word for the undulated tinamou, a species of ground bird common to the Amazon basin.
He had identified the avian whistleblower as a pale-browed tinamou – which is not native to Colombia.
It has licences to reintroduce the tapir, the red macaw, the woolly spider monkey and two spectacular birds, the solitary tinamou and the black-fronted piping guan.
Reid Rumelt, a computational ornithologist, just returned to his D.C. home from the Andes Mountains, where he recorded 3,600 hours of the endangered undulated tinamou.
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