Closing her eyes and trying to sleep, she suddenly heard the familiar caw of a crow from above in the tree. |
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The ground was hard and brown and rocky, parched, but the caw of birds from a nearby grove of olive trees muted the sound of my footsteps. |
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A raven cried from a tree top, its caw echoing over a beaver-meadow of scarlet pitcher plants. |
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Similarly her voice possesses a strange avian quality somewhere between a dulcet caw, a folk drawl and that associated with young children. |
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Instead I was met with the harsh caw of a crow, breaking the eerie silence. |
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Rooks caw in the trees, jackdaws nest in their new chimney, sparrows feed on neighbours' tables. |
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Not for her, of course, left swinging in a cave to the caw of crows, but so the rest of us can go on. |
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Young himself appears to favor not the lofty melodies of tradition's songbirds but the crows' familiar caw caw. |
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A caw sounded and she looked up to see a large crow sitting on a bright streetlamp. |
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Branches against the window creak and caw in the wind like birds. |
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He kept seagulls as pets, or said he had, and that he spoke their language: he would flap his hands, and skip, and caw. |
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The swallows did not so much sing as caw and gabble, their circuits a marvel of speed and ingenuity. |
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And Malcolm let out a caw that was so exact, so piercingly beautiful, that Ares felt his heart contract. |
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When a pig or a caw causes damage to property, we try and settle the issue with the owner of the animal. |
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A large raven sat perched upon the fence and gave a loud, obnoxious caw. |
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The crow's caw is much more harsh and resonant than that of the rook. |
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It's like having a crow caw constantly in your ear at noon every weekday, and then suddenly being told that it's going to be replaced with something else. |
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Sometimes when they fly over me they look me in the eye and caw. |
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We saw the daw get on the back of the sow. The tail of the sow went wig, wag, wig, wag, and all the daw did was Caw, caw, caw, caw. |
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Miss Hepburn's bruised caw acquires beauty and nobility, like her skinny figure, which is in the shape of a dairymaid's yoke across the shoulders and has no obvious right to be as stirring as it is. |
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The path zigzagged through the now disused Caw Quarry, first past a stone hut and then past the opening of an old level. |
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Travelling in this direction the principal hills are Kirk Fell, Pillar, Scoat Fell, Haycock and Caw Fell. |
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Beyond Caw Fell is the lower Lank Rigg group, consisting of Lank Rigg, Crag Fell and Grike. |
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The principal fells in this section are Kirk Fell, Pillar, Scoat Fell, Haycock and Caw Fell, followed by the lower Lank Rigg group. |
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