What is another word for waxwings?

Pronunciation: [wˈakswɪŋz] (IPA)

Waxwings, also known as cedar waxwings, are a species of small birds native to North America. These birds are easily recognizable for their unique features such as their soft, silky plumage and their distinctive crest on their heads. Waxwings are also known for their love for sweet fruits, especially those found in winter. Some synonyms for the word "waxwings" include cherry birds, berry birds, and silky-flycatchers. These names are derived from the birds' fondness for cherries and berries, as well as their soft, silky feathers. Other alternative names include cedar birds, masked waxwings, and plumed waxwings - all of which describe the distinct characteristics of this beautiful bird species.

Usage examples for Waxwings

It may be these waxwings have greatly increased, but however uncommon they may still be considered, certainly no one who had ever seen a flock containing more than a thousand of them, resting on the trees of a lawn within sight of New York City, as the writer has done, could be expected to consider the birds "very rare."
"Bird-Neighbors"
Blanchan, Neltje
In addition to ten deer, we shot three wild geese, seven sharp-tailed grouse, eleven sage grouse, nine Bohemian waxwings, and a magpie, for their skeletons.
"The Extermination of the American Bison"
William T. Hornaday
The most mischievous enemies of the cherries, however, here as at the North, are the cedar waxwings, or "cherry-birds."
"Wake-Robin"
John Burroughs

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