Austral English - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
p. 433:
"The dead bodies are burnt or buried, though some in North Australia place the corpse in the paper bark of the tea-tree, and deposit it in a hollow tree."
1883. `Royal Commission on Fisheries of Tasmania,' p. x.x.xvi:
"The young [of the b.a.s.t.a.r.d trumpeter] are always coloured, more or less, like the red, and are known by some as `paper-fish.'
The mature form of the silver b.a.s.t.a.r.d is alone caught. This is conclusive as favouring the opinion that the silver is simply the mature form of the red."
1802. D. Collins, `Account of New South Wales,' vol. ii.
p. 300:
"By him [Wilson, a convict] the first bird of paradise ever seen in this country had been shot."
[This was the Lyre-bird.]
1845. E. J. Wakefield, `Adventures in New Zealand,' c. 1.
p. 57:
"These (wild ducks of different sorts) are princ.i.p.ally the black, the grey, the blue-winged, and the paradise-duck, or `pu tangi tangi,' as it is called by the natives. The last is nearly as large as a goose, and of beautiful plumage."
1817. O'Hara, `The History of New South Wales,' p. 452:
"In the reaches or pools of the Campbell River, the very curious animal called the paradox, or watermole, is seen in great numbers."
NOTE.--The town Parramatta, though formerly often spelt with one r, is now always spelt with two.
1846. C. P. Hodgson, `Reminiscences of Australia,' p. 367:
"A peculiar tweed, made in the colony, and chiefly at Paramatta, hence the name."
1883. J. Hector, `Handbook of New Zealand, p. 19:
"Paramattas, fine cloths originally made from the Paramatta wool, with silk warps, though now woollen."
Black-headed Pardalote-- Pardalotus melanocephalus, Gould.
Chestnut-rumped P.-- P. uropygialis, Gould.
Forty-spotted P.-- P. quadragintus, Gould; called also Forty-Spot (q.v.).
Orange-tipped P.-- P. a.s.similis, Ramsay.
Red-browed P.-- P. rubricatus, Gould.
Red-tipped P.-- P. ornatus, Temm.
Spotted P.-- P. punctatus, Temm.; the bird originally called the Diamond Bird (q.v.).
Yellow-rumped P.-- P. xanthopygius, McCoy.
Yellow-tipped P.-- P. affinis, Gould.--
1848. J. Gould, `Birds of Australia,' vol. ii. pl. 35:
"No species of the genus to which this bird belongs is more widely and generally distributed than the spotted pardalote, Pardalotus punctatus."
1855. Rev. R. Taylor, `Te Ika a Maui,' p. 407:
"Family, Anatida--Parera, turuki (Anas superciliosa), the duck; very similar to the wild duck of England."
1893. `The Argus,' March 25, p. 4, col. 6:
"The egg of the comb-crested parra s.h.i.+nes amongst its neighbours so vividly that it at once catches the eye, and suggests a polished agate rather than an egg. The bird itself is something of a gem, too, when seen skipping with its long water-walking claws over the floating leaves of pink and blue water-lilies."
Alexandra Parrakeet-- Spathopterus (Polytelis) alexandra, Gould.
Beautiful P.-- Psephotus pulcherrimus, Gould.
Black-tailed P.-- Polytelis melanura, Vig. and Hors.; called also Rock-pebbler.
Blue-cheeked P.-- Platycercus amathusiae, Bp.
c.o.c.katoo P.-- Calopsittacus novae-hollandiae Gmel.
Crimson-bellied P.-- Psephotus haematogaster, Gould.
Golden-shouldered P.-- Psephotus chrysopterygius, Gould.
Green P.-- Platycercus flaviventris, Temm.