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MOCK , an adjective meaning sham, feigned,See also: spurious, falsely imitative
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As a verb it means to deride or imitate contemptuously
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The derivation of O
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Fr. mocquer, mod. moquer; Ital. moccare, from which the See also: English word is adopted, is disputed
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Some authorities refer it to Ger. mucken, mucksen, to growl, grumble, which is probably echoic in origin; others to a supposed See also: Late See also: Lat. muccare, formed from mucus—mucus, in the sense of " to wipe the nose at."
MOCKING-See also: BIRD, or MOCK-BIRD (as W
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Charleton, J
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Ray and M
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See also: Catesby called it), the popular name of birds belonging to the See also: American sub-See also: family Miminae of the thrushes, Turdidae, differing by having the See also: tarsus scutellate in front, while the typical thrushes have it covered by a single horny See also: plate
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Mimus polyglottus, the See also: northern mocking-bird, inhabits the See also: southern See also: part of the See also: United States, being in the See also: north only a summer visitant; it breeds rarely in New See also: England, is seldom found north of the 38th parallel, and migrates to the See also: south in winter, passing that season in the Gulf States and Mexico
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It appears to be less numerous on the western See also: side of the Alleghanies, though found in suitable localities across the continent to the Pacific See also: coast, but seldom farther north than Virginia and southern See also: Illinois, and it is said to be See also: common in Kansas
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J
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J
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See also: Audubon states that the mocking-birds which are See also: resident all the See also: year round in See also: Louisiana attack their travelled brethren on the return of the latter from the north in autumn
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The names of the See also: species, both English and scientific, have been bestowed from its capacity of success-fully imitating the cry of many other birds, to say nothing of other sounds, in addition to uttering notes of its own which possess a varied range and liquid fullness of See also: tone that are unequalled, according to its admirers, even by those of the See also: nightingale (q.v.)
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Plain in plumage, being greyish See also: brown above and dull
See also: white below, while its quills are dingy black, variegated with white, there is little about the mocking-bird's appearance beyond its graceful
See also: form to recommend it; but the lively gesticulations it exhibits are very attractive, and therein its See also: European See also: rival in melody is fax surpassed, for the See also: cock-bird mounts aloft in rapid
circling See also: flight, and, alighting on a conspicuous See also: perch, pours forth his ever-changing See also: song to the delight of all listeners; while his actions in attendance on his mate are playfully See also: demonstrative and equally See also: interest the observer
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The mocking-bird is more-over of See also: familiar habits, haunting the neighbourhood of houses, and is therefore a general favourite
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The See also: nest is placed with little regard to concealment, and is not distinguished by much care in its construction: The eggs, from three to six in number, are of a pale bluish-See also: green, blotched and spotted with See also: light yellowish-brown
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They, as well as the See also: young, are much sought after by See also: snakes, but the parents are often successful in repelling these deadly enemies, and are always ready to wage war against any intruder on their precincts, be it See also: man, See also: cat or hawk
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Their See also: food is various, consisting of berries, seeds and See also: insects
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Some twelve or fourteen other species of Mimus have been recognized, mostly from South See also: America; but M
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See also: Orpheus seems to be common to some of the Greater See also: Antilles, and M. hilli is See also: peculiar to
See also: Jamaica, while the See also: Bahamas have a See also: local See also: race in M. bahamensis. he so-called See also: mountain mocking-bird (Oreoscoptes montanus) is a form not very distant from Mimus; but it inhabits exclusively the plains overgrown with See also: sage-See also: brush (See also: Artemisia) of the interior table-See also: land of North America, and is not at all imitative in its notes, so that it is an instance of a misnomer
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Of the various other genera allied to Mimus, the best known are the thrashers (genus Harporhynchus) of which six or eight species are found in North America, which are thrush-like and shy in their habits and do not mimic; and the cat-bird (Galeoscoptes carolinensis), which in addition to having an attractive song, utters clucks, whistles and mewing sounds
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The sooty-See also: grey colour that, deepening into blackish-brown on the See also: crown and quills, pervades the whole of its plumage—the See also: lower tail-coverts, which are of a deep See also: chestnut, excepted—renders it a conspicuous See also: object; and though, for some reason or other, far from being a favourite, it is always willing when undisturbed to become intimate with men's abodes
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It has a much wider range on the American continent than the mocking-bird, and is one of the few species that are resident in Bermuda, while on more than one occasion it is said to have appeared in See also: Europe
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The name mocking-bird, or more frequently mock-nightingale, is in England occasionally given to some of the warblers (q.v.), especially the blackcap (Sylvia atricapilla), and the sedge-bird (Acrocephalus schoenobaenus) . In See also: India and See also: Australia the same name is sometimes applied to other species
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