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A Cuckoo is a bird. It lays one egg in a nest of another bird species. When the Cuckoo chick hatches, it ejects from the nest the eggs and/or chicks of the birds which built the nest, and is fed all the food by the "parent" birds. The parent Cuckoo takes no part in bringing up it's chick. The Cuckoo grows to be a large bird and can look daft sitting on a tiny nest, being fed by the small "parent" birds like finches, etc. The name Cuckoo comes from it's call - "Cook-koo" as in the Cuckoo clock. There is also a Flower called the Cuckoo.
It's a bird that makes the sound "cuckoo" and is famous for laying its eggs in other birds nests. The cuckoo chick then hatches before the other eggs, and pushes them out of the nest. The mother of the murdered eggs then presumes that the cuckoo is its own offspring and feeds it.
it is called crazy or if the clock is cooking
Yes. An onomatopeoia is a word made to sound like whatever it is describing. The Cuckoo bird makes a "cuckoo" sound as its call.
Doves and sometimes pigeons make a sound close to that description. Owls make a sound similar, but their call is more of a 'hoo' sound or 'hoot.' If the bird makes a 'cuckoo' sound then it is a cuckoo bird.
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No. Onomatopoeia is a word that sounds like the thing. Bang, Pop. Crackle. The birds- cuckoo, bob white and whippoorwill all have calls that sound like their name.
North America.
CUCKOO
The association of the cuckoo with insanity is because of the cuckoo clock. The gears and noisy mechanical cuckoo of the cuckoo clock are figuratively equated with the strange goings-on of a crazy person's mind.
"Onomatopoeia" is the formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named (e.g., cuckoo, sizzle, bang).
yes