Tue 7 Nov 2006
More Fun With Animal Words
Posted by Brian Leaf under Info, Observing Nature
You may know James Lipton as the great interviewer on “Inside the Actor’s Studio.” But Lipton is also an author with a passion for language, specifically Old World phrases that describ sets of things — a rope of pearls, a school of fish or a cluster of grapes.
These terms are hundreds of years old. They were invented as a game by hunters to describe groups of animals they encountered. Lipton details more than 1,000 terms — including a lot more than just about wildlife — in recent editions of his classics “An Exxaltation of Larks.” We have the 1984 edition in our library at Severson Dells Nature Center. Here are a few related to wildlife.
- A leap of leopards.
- A rafter of turkeys.
- A sloth of bears.
- A party of jays.
- A siege of herons.
- A labor of moles.
- A charm of finches.
- A skein of geese.
- A cast of hawks.
- A deceit of lapwings.
- A bouquet of pheasants.
- An unkindness of ravens.
- A knot of toads.
- A host of sparrows.
- A descent of woodpeckers.
- A dray of squirrels.
- A watch of nightingales.
- A route of wolves.
- A parliament of owls.
- A smack of jellyfish.
- A murmuration of starlings.
- A spring of teal
Related post: Fun With Animal Words
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