waterthrush
noun
wa·ter·thrush
ˈwȯ-tər-ˌthrəsh
ˈwä-
plural waterthrushes
: either of two North American warblers (Parkesia noveboracensis and P. motacilla of the family Parulidae) that have brown backs and white underparts with dark streaks and that are found near fresh water (such as streams or bogs)
Waterthrushes are colored to match their environment, which is wet bogs, dark swamps and other such areas. … But my favorite way to identify waterthrushes is how they walk. They can hardly take a single step without moving their entire backend up and down.—Bird Watcher's General Store
Note: Though not members of the thrush family, waterthrushes get their name from their close resemblance to some common North American thrushes, such as the wood thrush.
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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