| 释义 | 
		Definition of trogon in English: trogonnoun ˈtrəʊɡɒnˈtrōɡän A bird of tropical American forests, with a long tail and brilliantly coloured plumage. Family Trogonidae: several genera, in particular Trogon, and many species; the quetzals also belong to this family  Example sentencesExamples -  Here we encountered our first hornbills of the trip, in addition to trogons and a most special coral-billed ground-cuckoo.
 -  The small island was alive with wildlife: sloths, tapirs, peccaries, howler monkeys, tamarins, ocelots, blue - headed parrots, trogons and oropendolas, birds that make noises like water dropping on water.
 -  On the premises were ten species of hummingbirds, slaty-tailed trogon, rufous and broad-billed motmots, collared aricaris.
 -  We also saw a citreoline trogon, a gorgeous bird with a predominantly yellow underside.
 -  Time and again he provoked a response, be it from a Cuban parrot, a Cuban pygmy owl, a Cuban trogon or a Cuban red-bellied woodpecker.
 
 
 Origin   Late 18th century: from modern Latin, from Greek trōgōn, from trōgein 'gnaw'.    Definition of trogon in US English: trogonnounˈtrōɡän A bird of tropical American forests, with a long tail and brilliantly colored plumage. Family Trogonidae: several genera, in particular Trogon, and many species; the quetzals also belong to this family  Example sentencesExamples -  On the premises were ten species of hummingbirds, slaty-tailed trogon, rufous and broad-billed motmots, collared aricaris.
 -  Time and again he provoked a response, be it from a Cuban parrot, a Cuban pygmy owl, a Cuban trogon or a Cuban red-bellied woodpecker.
 -  We also saw a citreoline trogon, a gorgeous bird with a predominantly yellow underside.
 -  The small island was alive with wildlife: sloths, tapirs, peccaries, howler monkeys, tamarins, ocelots, blue - headed parrots, trogons and oropendolas, birds that make noises like water dropping on water.
 -  Here we encountered our first hornbills of the trip, in addition to trogons and a most special coral-billed ground-cuckoo.
 
 
 Origin   Late 18th century: from modern Latin, from Greek trōgōn, from trōgein ‘gnaw’.     |