Not all naturally occurring phenomenon can or should be interpreted as omens.
In the case of a bird appearing to try to get in via a window, there are several reasons why this may be happening.
- in some light conditions a window's surface can become reflective (like a mirror) and the bird may be trying to get into the reflection of the garden or landscape behind it.
- it may see its own reflection as a rival for territory and be trying to chase itself away.
- the bird may have become disoriented and be trying to escape.
The only time when this behavior should be interpreted as an omen is if the kind of bird (raven, robin, hummingbird, etc) is significant to you personally and if the window is to your own personal space. In which case the interpretation is individual and not a "general" omen.
It cannot see the glass easily.
Perhaps it is threatening the bird it sees in its reflection.
Actually, the lay-man term is spelled: thrush. The medical term is: oral Candidiasis.
Song thrush and hovering birds like swallows
The possessive form of the plural noun thrushes is thrushes'.example: We saw many thrushes' tracks in the snow where the wind had scattered seeds.All English plural nouns ending in s form the possessive by adding an apostrophe after the ending s.
close the window?
Mavis is derived from Old French, and is the name of a type of song thrush. Beyond that, I am not aware of any specific meaning.
Song thrush. Mistle thrush. There are many birds around the world whose name ends with thrush (South Island thrush, native thrush, New Zealand thrush...)
A window with a circular geometric pattern.
Window - Good news, opportunity.
No, thrush is not a bacteria. Thrush is the name of a yeast infection.
"Sent his opponent flying" is used when someone defeats a person in a game. They aren't actually "sending them flying", it is an exaggeration meaning "they were utterly defeated".
An ant thrush is either of two species of insectivorous thrush - Neocossyphus rufus - the red-tailed ant thrush - and neocossyphus poensis - the white-tailed ant thrush.
Flying level refers to a technique where the level instrument is moved horizontally between two points without being sighted on any intermediate points. This method is typically used to quickly establish a rough horizontal line over a long distance.