| 释义 | 
		Definition of crombec in English: crombecnoun ˈkrɒmbɛkˈkrämbek A small African warbler with a very short tail, and grey or green upper parts with rufous or white underparts. Genus Sylvietta, family Sylviidae: several species, in particular the (northern) crombec (S. brachyura)  Example sentencesExamples -  The four species of longbills are mostly forest birds with longer bills and tails than crombecs, and mostly very drab in plumage.
 -  New birds will come thick and fast - woodpeckers, kingfishers, barbets, tinkerbirds, widows, cisticolas, apalis and prinias, crombecs, various sparrows and canaries.
 -  We headed up the Lake Albert escarpment avoiding marching soldiers then stopped for an hour in the Budongo Forest for a walk with crombecs.
 -  We will stop en route to enjoy the birdlife of Langebaan Lagoon, the colony of Cape Gannets at Lambert's Bay, and the more unusual passerines of the arid areas; in particular the tit-babblers, larks and crombecs.
 -  This tour saw all of the possible weavers and crombecs of Kenya.
 
 
 Origin   Early 20th century: from French, from Dutch krom 'crooked' + bek 'beak'.    Definition of crombec in US English: crombecnounˈkrämbek A small African warbler with a very short tail, and gray or green upper parts with rufous or white underparts. Genus Sylvietta, family Sylviidae: several species, in particular the (northern) crombec (S. brachyura)  Example sentencesExamples -  The four species of longbills are mostly forest birds with longer bills and tails than crombecs, and mostly very drab in plumage.
 -  This tour saw all of the possible weavers and crombecs of Kenya.
 -  New birds will come thick and fast - woodpeckers, kingfishers, barbets, tinkerbirds, widows, cisticolas, apalis and prinias, crombecs, various sparrows and canaries.
 -  We will stop en route to enjoy the birdlife of Langebaan Lagoon, the colony of Cape Gannets at Lambert's Bay, and the more unusual passerines of the arid areas; in particular the tit-babblers, larks and crombecs.
 -  We headed up the Lake Albert escarpment avoiding marching soldiers then stopped for an hour in the Budongo Forest for a walk with crombecs.
 
 
 Origin   Early 20th century: from French, from Dutch krom ‘crooked’ + bek ‘beak’.     |