English edit

Etymology edit

Tupian.

Noun edit

pitangua (plural pitanguas)

  1. The boat-billed flycatcher, Megarynchus pitangua.
    • 1895, Wirt Robinson, A Flying Trip to the Tropics: A Record of an Ornithological Visit to the United States of Colombia, South America and to the Island of Curaçao, West Indies, in the Year 1892, page 43:
      This was probably the pitangua flycatcher (Megarhynchus pitangua). I saw several flocks of parrakeets, — one of which lit near us, — and I started to creep up on them; but they took alarm, and flew before I was within range.
    • 1914, William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, page 4513, in the definition of "Pitangus":
      A genus of clamatorial passerine birds of the family Tyrannidte, or tyrant-flycatchers; the Derbian flycatchers, not including the pitangua. They have a long and straight stout bill hooked at the end, ...
    • 1925, Bulletin of the Pan American Union:
      [...] as the buccos or puff birds, the motmots, and the jacamars. Four of our illustrations are devoted to these birds, with an additional one of the beautiful Central American flycatcher, that is, the pitangua flycatcher (Megarhynchus pitangua) (Linn.) ...
    • 2004, Fe Liza Bencosme, Clark Norton, Adventure Guide to the Dominican Republic, →ISBN, page 29:
      Two new species recently found in the mountains include the pitangua, a night bird that nests in the ground among dry leaves, and the white-winged crossed bill, which lives exclusively in the pine forests of high mountains ...