释义 |
ˈsugar-bird [G. zuckervogel is used in senses 1 and 2. Sense 3 is after Du. suikervogel.] A name applied to various small birds which feed (or were supposed to feed) on the nectar of flowers. †1. = canary-bird. Obs.
1688Holme Armoury ii. xi. 242/2 The Canary Bird, or Sugar Bird..is as big as a common Titmouse. 2. A bird of the genus Certhiola, belonging to the family Cærebidæ, in the W. Indies and S. America; also applied to the genera Certhia and Dacnis.
1787Latham Gen. Synop. Birds Suppl. 128 Famous Creeper... A Specimen of this, in the collection of the late Mr. Boddam, was called by the name of Sugar-Bird. 1879E. P. Wright Anim. Life 255 The Sugar-birds, or Cerebidæ, are confined to the tropical parts of America. 1894Newton Dict. Birds iii. 761 The Banana Quit is the Sugar-bird. 1902Nature 25 Sept. 541/2 A Blue Sugar-bird (Dacnis cayana) from Brazil. 3. Applied to various members of the family Nectariniidæ or Sun-birds of Africa; also, an African honey-eater of the genus Promerops.
1798A. Barnard Jrnl. Apr. in Lives of Lindsays (1849) III. 408 The sugar-bird's tail..is long and elegantly formed. 1822W. J. Burchell Trav. S. Afr. I. ii. 18 The delicate Humming-birds (Trochili) of South America are, in Southern Africa, represented by the Nectariniæ, here called by the Dutch colonists Suiker-vogels (sugar-birds), from having been observed..to feed principally on the honey of the flowers of the Suiker-bosch (sugar-bush). 1834Pringle Afr. Sk. 22 Brilliant as the glancing plumes Of sugar-birds among its blooms. 1908Chr. Express 1 Apr. 55/1 A male Long⁓tailed sugar-bird (Promerops cafer). 1913D. Fairbridge That which hath Been 30 The emerald-throated sugar-birds..darted from one pink protea to another. 1973S. Cloete Company with Heart of Gold 155 A sugar bird returned to its infinitesimal nest in the grey bush. |