There is a strong belief that the Field Sparrow and the English sparrow are the same bird. They look very similar in their markings and feather coloring.
Yes. Chidiya and Pakshi mean the same, that is both refer to birds.
tweet!tweet! Tweet! Tweet! is not a Palindrome. The word tweet is not spelled the same both forwards and backwards.
If you mean the fruit and the bird both called kiwi, then it's the same in English. We still call them kiwi.
Sparrows are a particular type of finch. Both sparrow and finch are extremely widely used names that have no specific meaning when used colloquially. True sparrows are related to weavers and are mostly sombrely coloured but many bird species that are named sparrow are rather spectacularly coloured, such as golden song sparrows.
A hen. The terminology is the same for just about all birds.
The bird that has the same name as a fruit is the "bluejay."
yes they do because like the song his eyes is a sparrow signifying god has great eyes and watches over that is the same way the sparrow has great eyes
a bird on the ground
It is a mythical bird devised from the red head of the sparrow hawk and the blue body of a bluejay. The term Jayhawk comes from the free-staters of Kansas during the Civil War. To this day, anyone born in Kansas is known by the same term that these free-staters went by, a Jayhawker.
The same as any other bird.
Yes, hens are female chickens, so they are the same type of bird.
Jay as in a type of bird - arrendajo or urraca Jay as in some one's name remains Jay (still pronounced the same in English and Spanish)