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gnatcatcher
[ nat-kach-er ]
noun
- any tiny insect-eating, New World warbler of the genus Polioptila, having a long, mobile tail and a slender bill.
gnatcatcher
/ ˈnætˌkætʃə /
noun
- any of various small American songbirds of the genus Polioptila and related genera, typically having a long tail and a pale bluish-grey plumage: family Muscicapidae (Old World flycatchers, etc)
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Word History and Origins
Origin of gnatcatcher1
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Example Sentences
A blue-gray gnatcatcher is drawling somewhere in the leafy treetops.
From Project Gutenberg
I had hardly seated myself when the jaunty little gnatcatcher came flying over and lit in an upper branch of the tree.
From Project Gutenberg
Perhaps a difference of opinion had arisen on architectural points, and Mrs. Gnatcatcher had taken matters into her own hands.
From Project Gutenberg
The only nest like the hummingbird's, and comparable to it in neatness and symmetry, is that of the blue-gray gnatcatcher.
From Project Gutenberg
In color, form, proportions and voice, the Gnatcatcher may properly be called 'dainty.'
From Project Gutenberg
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