As is well known, the robin is pugnacious, fighting with its own kind and attacking other birds. |
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The last event was the traditional tug-of-war, in which a round robin knockout decided the winner. |
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The chapter ends by providing numerous excerpts from historical legends and folklore that mention the robin. |
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Primrose wasn't that fancy a flower and the robin redbreast was a rather plain bird. |
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We're not talking about an open tournament here, we're discussing an elite round robin event consisting of all the world's finest players. |
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My opponent, the defending champion, was the top-rated player and I was number two in the 6-player round robin. |
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In the rufous bush robin, nest size was positively related to the size of prey males carried to the nest to feed the young. |
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The bantams have been giving me strange looks recently, and a small robin is trying to nest in our bedroom. |
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The marbled murrelet, a bird about the size of a robin, is the only seabird to nest in old growth forest. |
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The thrushes, a family that includes the American robin and the Eastern bluebird, are known for their vocal skill. |
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Yesterday a fat robin visited the brightly berried bush outside my office window. |
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Down in the bog, the first red-winged blackbirds were yodeling, and a robin sang in the evening. |
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In addition, batman often has to rescue, save, or generally protect robin from his uppishness and his willingness to get into trouble. |
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She was persecuted for signing a round robin that was critical of no-platforming. |
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At each study site, we plotted the location of all nest predators seen or heard relative to robin nests. |
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It turns out that multiple paternity is very common, even among beloved backyard birds like the cardinal and robin. |
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Plants are greater stitchwort, bluebell, devils bit scabious, Himalayan balsam, ragged robin, marsh marigold, quaking grass and lady's smock. |
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In February, people pine for a glimpse of this herald of spring, but by April, the robin has already worn out its welcome. |
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A single robin, pecking about on the garden step for his breakfast, will scatter a host of sparrows. |
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The waters belong to the fish and whales, the squirrels and fox, the llama and elephant, the penguin and robin. |
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Sitting by our persimmon tree last fall I watched a robin stretch out to peck off a piece of the bright, ripe fruit. |
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I'm thinking a phoebe, purple martin, starling fluttering up, a kingbird, I have no idea what's on the lowest wire, a nuthatch and a robin. |
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All team competitions were a round robin affair with each team playing the other once. |
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The tournament is played on a round robin basis, with each team playing every other team. |
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Local baseball players Dale and Zane Anderson have completed Baseball Alberta's round robin playdowns with an 11-record. |
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Both Sabre teams finished third in their respective pools after round robin play and advanced to their respective divisional play-off rounds. |
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Its dense growth is overshadowing native wild flowers such as ragged robin, marsh woundwart and meadow cranesbill. |
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Niverville rolled through the round robin at the provincials without a loss scoring four straight-set victories. |
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The 16 players in each category will be paired in a round robin system with the top eight qualifying for the final round. |
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Everything was bone dry, and the cedar breaks below the escarpment held not a single robin, waxwing, solitaire, or bluebird. |
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The site already has a good stock of colourful wild flower species such as ragged robin, great burnet and meadowsweet. |
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With the onset of summer there's the cow parsley, poppies, honeysuckle, wild roses, speedwell, ragged robin and foxgloves. |
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We'll be walking through meadows which contained many wild flowers including meadow sweet, ragged robin and some sort of orchid. |
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The robin flew down to join the party in case there was a juicy snack left over. |
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A wheatear with white eyebrow and orange bib perched nearby, robin shaped, hardly larger, soon to fly to Africa. |
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In this area you may see the brown creeper, tomtit, robin, bellbird, rifleman, wood pigeon, falcon and kea. |
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The New Zealand pigeon is thriving as a result of this initiative and the North Island robin, introduced in 1997, has already produced young. |
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Incredibly, all six teams in the provincial tournament finished with 1-1 round robin records, as tie-breaking formulas were utilized to break the logjam. |
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And a robin hopped across the parched ground, bill held open in the heat. |
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Flocks of wintering water birds include the thrush, the kingfisher, the robin, the shama, the barbet, the bee-eater, the flycatcher, the sunbird, the bulbul and the drongo. |
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A robin redbreast in England is as rare as an penguin in Pennsylvania. |
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As we had learned from those first brave chickadees, the cardinal, the robin family, and now the sparrow, communion with another life can change your perspective on the world. |
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Over time, songbirds like the robin and other prized avians, including bald eagles and peregrine falcons, ingested enough contaminated prey that they died of DDT poisoning. |
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Bird life in the camp is a special feature with many species of robin, purple-crested lourie, narina trogan and pink-throated twinspots among the special treats. |
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Sitting beneath fans of ferns, perfect natural sunshades, we were joined within minutes by two laughing kookaburras, a rosella and a yellow-breasted robin. |
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The format for the three day competition is two foursomes and five singles and the other countries participating in the round robin series are England, Sweden and Wales. |
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Alongside miles of rivers and streams its dense growth is overshadowing native wild flowers such as ragged robin, purple loosestrife, marsh woundwart and meadow cranesbill. |
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He returned to England in January 1701 but on arrival in the Downs found that his crew had dispatched a round robin to the Admiralty alleging his ill usage of them. |
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As they turned into Hertford Street they startled a robin from the poet's head on a barren fountain, and he fled away with a cameo note. |
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The main difference from the merit table was all sides would now have to play all other sides in a round robin. |
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They include Bewick's European robin, shown as a wood engraving and as a watercolour. |
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On two occasions, researchers found bats with, or near, identifiable bits from a European robin or a warbler. |
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Thick cakes of mud Like parathas clung to our boots, and we killed each wireworm singly, If the clodhopping robin didn't pick it off first. |
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There are bees buzzing in the comfrey, blackbirds rootling through the borders and my friend the robin singing from the silver birch. |
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Gurnard soup Gurnards, sometimes called the sea robin, are found in the Atlantic and Mediterranean. |
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Plant a flowering dogwood tree and, chances are, an American robin will reward you with a clutch of skyblue eggs in late spring. |
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I believe the Urchin showed more enthusiasm over the stone and the robin than over any of the amazements that succeeded them. |
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They can catch soap like a bear catches a slippery fish, slurp pasta like a robin slurps a yummy worm, and hold treats tight with tiny mouse-like fingers. |
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Marsh marigolds, purple loosestrife, yellow iris, bogbean, ragged robin and water mint will all grow happily in waterlogged soil and attract lots of insects. |
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In 2010 five teams competed in two rounds of round robin matches in the Championship Division, while four teams competed in the Developmental Division. |
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Above us, parrot-like kaka birds A feed on the red flowers of a rata tree, while below, a Stewart Island robin hops on the ground to mimic rain and lure out worms. |
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It's great to know that blackbird, robin and song thrush chicks are back up from last June, and it would suggest that the weather conditions were just right in that month. |
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It contains specialised plants such as bog asphodel, bog bean, cotton grass, ragged robin and marsh thistle and has been designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest. |
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The robin began featuring on many Christmas cards in the mid 19th century. |
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