Yes, and the sounds of human activities as well.
There are actually quite a few types of birds that mock sounds they hear. My Cockatiel mocks the stove beeps, a cat food can being opened, my cats, the sound of humans swallowing.
To Mock a Mockingbird was created in 1985.
To Mock a Mockingbird has 256 pages.
The ISBN of To Mock a Mockingbird is 0-19-280142-2.
" To Mock a Killing Bird"
Simply because they mimics sounds of other birds and seem to mock them.
No, it mocks other birds by imitating their calls.
so it will mock the bell
Simply because they mimics sounds of other birds and seem to mock them.
Some words with the root word "mocking" include mockery, mock, and mockingly.
Many birds get their name from their own song such as the chickadee or the whipporwhil. A mockingbird is a bird that can mimic or "mock" the calls of other birds. It often does this to chase birds from a different breed from its territory. The mockingbird mimics the rival bird's call, fooling the rival into believing that the territory is already taken by one of its own.
well what they they had to eat was mock everything really: mock goose, mock ham and even mock bread
The word "mock" can be used as a verb or an adjective.---Mock as a verb means to ridicule or belittle, often by imitation (e.g. mockingbird).Example : "The students would mock the posture and the voice of the professor."Mock as an adjective similarly means false, imitation, or phony (may include sarcasm).Example : "Bill reacted with mock concern after his car nearly hit the neighbor's trash can."