See also: wyła

English edit

Etymology edit

Likely from a Pama-Nyungan language; compare Awabakal waiila (black cockatoo).

Noun edit

wyla

  1. The yellow-tailed black cockatoo or funereal cockatoo, Calyptorhynchus funereus, a bird native to Australia.
    • 1826, N.A. Vigors, Thomas Horsefield, “A description of the Australian birds in the collection of the Linnean Society”, in Transactions of the Linnean Society[1], volume 15, page 273:
      The natives tell me of another kind of Cockatoo (besides Wyla and Geringora), which they call Carat’. It is very shy.
    • 1952, Encyclopædia Britannica, A New Survey of Universal Knowledge, page 912:
      The dark-plumaged funereal cockatoo or wyla (Calyptorhynchus funereus) is another Australian species.

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