Yes. At least the birds around here do. Like ducks for example. Have you ever noticed a bunch of ducks hanging out together?it means that people with the same intrests or personality hang out or become friends
it means that people with the same intrests or personality hang out or become friends.
Opposites attract
Birds of a feather, flock together - meaning that birds of the same breed will more often than not do the same thing. If 1 migrates, chances are there's a flock doing the same.
Birds with the same feather flock together means that like people tend to associate with each other. Those that like sports tend to hang together and those that like video games can be found together.
Birds of a feather flock together, Meaning people of similar tastes congregate together. English proverb of the mid 16th Century
In Tamil, the equivalent proverb for "birds of a feather flock together" is "ஊர் கண்ணே கோள் தூண்குது", which means that people with similar characteristics or interests tend to associate with each other.
Birds of a feather flock together!, used when we are referring to people who are quite alike each other and interested in the same things, these being what makes them become friends. All in all, a group of people with common interests, pleasures, hobbies, similar characters etc.
The saying is "Birds of a feather, flock together." I don't know who wrote it but it implies that people that have the same interests or likes, or feelings will gather together just as birds do. Birds will flock with their own kind. Mean people tend to hang out with other mean people. Intellects tend to hang out with other intellects. Crows fly with other crows. Sparrows gather with other sparrows. Criminals tend to stay near other criminals. And so on...... The related link below will explain it better than I can.
is the current taxonomic system accepted completely in scientific circles?
The collective noun is a flock of birds.
A flock generally refers to a large group of birds. It also applies to sheep.
Individuals of like character, taste, or background (tend to stay together), as in The members of the club had no trouble selecting their yearly outing they're all birds of a feather. The idea of like seeks like dates from ancient Greek times, and "Birds dwell with their kind" was quoted in the apocryphal book of Ecclesiasticus. The full saying in English, Birds of a feather flock together, was first recorded in 1545. The book appeared in the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, though it was later rejected as apocryphal by Jews. Like other major wisdom books (Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Job, and Wisdom of Solomon), Ecclesiasticus contains practical and moral rules and exhortations, frequently arranged according to subject matter-e.g., hypocrisy, generosity, filial respect.
Yes in starship she says twinkle twinkle little star and that backwards is mason