Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at fieldfares.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Fieldfares.

Examples

  • The Fieldfares are a very aggressive bird; the Blackbirds did not like the Fieldfares because they were chasing them away from the apples and pears we had put out for them.

    Whitehaven News headlines 2010

  • The Fieldfares are a very aggressive bird; the Blackbirds did not like the Fieldfares because they were chasing them away from the apples and pears we had put out for them.

    Whitehaven News headlines 2010

  • The Fieldfares are a very aggressive bird; the Blackbirds did not like the Fieldfares because they were chasing them away from the apples and pears we had put out for them.

    Whitehaven News headlines 2010

  • The Fieldfares are a very aggressive bird; the Blackbirds did not like the Fieldfares because they were chasing them away from the apples and pears we had put out for them.

    Whitehaven News headlines 2010

  • The Fieldfares are a very aggressive bird; the Blackbirds did not like the Fieldfares because they were chasing them away from the apples and pears we had put out for them.

    Whitehaven News headlines 2010

  • I do envy you actually because I sat hidden in the conifers waiting for Fieldfares to eat the fallen apples like they have done every day this week when I didn't have my camera. 2 hours and ONE bird, and even that one just peered out at me from the apple tree and made no attempt to show me his lovely plumage.

    Some quality squirrel time, and I have tea with Psycho's sister Elizabeth McClung 2007

  • Fieldfares and redwings visit the county in great numbers from the N. during the winter; one morning in the winter of 1886 the writer saw many thousands of fieldfares pass over St. Albans from the direction of Luton.

    Hertfordshire Herbert Winckworth Tompkins 1901

  • Fieldfares and redwings rose out of the hedges and flew away in their peculiarly scattered manner -- their flocks, though proceeding in the same direction, seeming all loose and disordered.

    The Amateur Poacher Richard Jefferies 1867

  • Fieldfares, Chewets, Beef, with sauces Gelopere and Pegyll. [c]

    Early English Meals and Manners Frederick James Furnivall 1867

  • (In the parish of Allesby, near Coventry, Fieldfares were observed as late as the 14th of May.)

    Essays in Natural History and Agriculture Thomas Garnett 1838

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.