It can if you either swear around it or teach it to swear.
Yes. If the parrot hears a word or words over again, it will pick it up.
over a thousand words. they like to learn swear words the most, because they get more reactions from their owners. the African grey( i think) is the parrot that can learn the most words.
A parrot and magician were on a cruise ship. During the magician's acts, the parrot would continue to swear. One day, the boat blew up, and my coincidence, the magician and parrot landed on the same piece of debris. The parrot kept swearing, and the magician would continually respond with, "SHUT UP". Finally the parrot asks, "hows you hole, hows you hole". The magician, again, responds with, "shut up". The parrot seems surprised at this and says, "mine too! Must be the salt water."
well a parrot is a bird and a parrot fish is a fish
Yes, Amazon parrot is the common name for a parrot of the genus Amazona.
It's a cave parrot
It is "will swear." Example: "The man will swear if someone makes him mad."
Parrot
The Kakapo is the world's:only nocturnal parrot,only flightless parrot,heaviest parrot,rarest parrot.
Parrot Foundation's motto is 'Parrot speaks your language'.
Parrot
It depends on the species and the health of the individual bird. Some large species can live to be 60 or older. Birds that learn to mimic when they are young will usually still remember the sounds they learned even decades later as long as the behavior is reinforced. This is why it not a good idea to teach a parrot to swear. Your parrot may outlive you and it can be hard to find a good home for a parrot that makes objectionable noises. Even old birds can still learn new things. In fact, it is best to keep up with a training routine for a bird's whole life to keep their behavior in line and to keep them from getting bored.