bloodbird
English
Etymology
From blood + bird, from the bright red colour of the male.
Noun
bloodbird (plural bloodbirds)
- An Australian honeyeater, the scarlet myzomela (Myzomela sanguinolenta).
- 1914, Amy Eleanor Mack, A Bush Calendar, page 29:
- I was watching a lovely little read-headed honey-eater—that beautiful scarlet and black bird, familiarly known as the bloodbird— feeding busily in the top of a small turpentine tree, and ceasing operations now and again to utter his little running call.
- 2013, Alyxandra Harvey, “Anywhere”, in Colleen Anderson, Steve Vernon, editor, Tesseracts Seventeen:
- At first only one bloodbird dipped low to catch insects in the last of the milkweed bursting their pods in the fields.
References
- “bloodbird”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.