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See quotation.
1894. `The Argus,' March 28, p. 5, col. 4:
"When a man (or party) has nearly died through want of water he is said to have `done a perish.'"
T. constricta is also called the Native Whelk.
1882. Rev. J. E. Tenison-Woods, `Fish and Fisheries of New South Wales,' p. 122:
"Trochocochlea constricta, Lam., is used as a subst.i.tute for the British perriwinkle, but it is only consumed to a very small extent."
petauristaes, a rope-dancer or tumbler).
See Petaurus.
The name was invented by zoologists out of Petaurist. In Greek, petauron was the perch or platform from which a "rope-dancer" stepped on to his rope. `L. & S.' say probably from pedauros, Aeolic for meteowros, high in air.
1886. P. Clarke, `New Chum in Australia,' p. 184 (`Century'):
"So up jumps Tom on the bar overhead with a long pething-pole, like an abnormally long and heavy alpenstock, in his hand; he selects the beast to be killed, stands over it in breathless .
. . silence, adjusts his point over the centre of the vertebra, and with one plunge sends the cruel point with unerring aim into the spinal cord."
(Grk. petra, rock, and galae, a weasel.)
It differs from all the other psittaci in having a long hind toe like that of a lark, and is purely terrestrial in its habits.
1848. J. Gould, `Birds of Australia,' vol. i. pl. 46:
"Pezoporus Formosus, Ill., Ground-parrakeet; Swamp-parrakeet, Colonists of Van Diemen's Land; Ground-parrakeet, New South Wales and Western Australia."
The Phalangers are chiefly Australian, but range as far as the Celebes. The word is from the Greek phalanx, one meaning of which is the bone between the joints of the fingers or toes. (The toes are more or less highly webbed in the Phalanger.)
1890. Rolf Boldrewood, `The Miner's Right,' p. 249:
"The cry of the night-bird, the rustle of the phalangers and the smaller marsupials, as they glided through the wiry frozen gra.s.s or climbed the clear stems of the eucalypti."
1891. `Guide to Zoological Gardens, Melbourne':
"A pair of the Short-headed Phalanger (Belideus breviceps) occupy the next division."
1894. R. Lydekker, `Marsupialia,' p. 75:
"The second great family of the herbivorous Diprotodont Marsupials is typically represented by the creatures properly known as phalangers, which the colonists of Australia persist in misnaming opossums. It includes however several other forms, such as the Flying-Phalangers [q.v.] and the Koala [q.v.]."
The [popular] name of Pouched-Mouse is far from being free from objection, yet, since the scientific names of neither this genus nor the genus Sminthopsis lend themselves readily for conversion into English, we are compelled to use the colonial designation as the vernacular names of both genera... . The largest of the thirteen known species does not exceed a Common Rat in size, while the majority are considerably smaller." (R. Lydekker, `Marsupialia,' p. 166.)
1853. J. West, `History of Tasmania,' vol. i. p. 324:
"The phascogales are small insectivorous animals found on the mountains and in the dense forest-parts of the island, and little is known of their habits."
1872. A. Domett, `Ranolf,' p. 209:
"A span-long Phasmid then he knew, Stretching its fore-limbs like a branching twig."
(1) The Lyre-bird (q.v.).
(2) The Lowan (q.v.), and see Turkey.
For Pheasant-fantail, see Fantail.
1877 (before). Australie, `From the Clyde to Braidwood,'
quoted in `Australian Ballads and Rhymes' (edition Sladen, p. 10):
"... Echoing notes Of lyre-tailed pheasants, in their own rich notes, Mocking the song of every forest-bird."
1885. Wanderer, `Beauteous Terrorist, etc., p. 60:
"And have we no visions pleasant Of the playful lyre-tail'd pheasant?"
See also Swamp-Pheasant.
1846. J. L. Stokes, `Discoveries in Australia,' vol. i.
c. vi. p. 125:
"I shot over the island and enjoyed some very fair sport, especially with the pheasant-cuckoo."