28 CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 



41. Lophophanes inornatus (Gamb.) Cass. B 287. c 28. R 38. 



Plain Titmouse. 



42. Lophophanes atrocristatus Cass. B 286. c 29. R 37. 



Black-crested Titmouse. 



43. Lophophanes wollweberi Bp. B 288. c 30. R 39. 



Bridled Titmouse. 



44. Parus atricapillus L. B 290. c si. R 41. 



Black-capped Chickadee- 



45. Parus atricapillus septentrionalis (Han*.) All. B 289. c 3i. R 4i. 



Long-tailed Chickadee. 



46. Parus atricapillus occidentalis (Bd.) Coues. B 291. c sic. R 416. 



Western Chickadee. 



47. Parus carolinensis Aud. B 293. c 3i&. R 42. 



Carolina Chickadee. [See Addenda, No. 879. 



48. Parus montanus Gamb. B 294. c 32. R 40. 



Mountain Chickadee. 



49. Parus hudsonicus Forst. B 296. c 33. R 45. 



Hudsonian Chickadee. 



we instinctively incline to the latter, both as throwing the stress of voice on the radical 

 syllable, instead of on the connecting vowel, and as the a in -phanes represents two vowels, 

 ai or cc as in phenomenon, pkcenogamous. 



41. L. In-or-na'-tus. Lat. in, negative, and ornatus, ornate, adorned; orno, I ornament. 



42. L. a-tro-cris-ta'-tus. Lat. ater, atra, atrum, black ; and cristatus, crested ; crista, a crest. 



Commonly written atricristatus ; see Parus, No. 44. 



N. B. The tenability of the position taken by Dr. Coues (B. C. V., i, p. 117 ; 1878) 

 respecting atro-cristatus has been queried by several correspondents; among them Mr. 

 W. C. Avery, of Greensboro', Ala., who some time since furnished an extensive com- 

 mentary on the names of the old Check List, and whose suggestions have often proved 

 valuable. Mr. Avery maintains atricristatus, adducing albicerata (sc. Jicus) from Pliny, 

 15, 18 ; and atri-, albi, magni-, &c., is undoubtedly a correct form of such compounds. 

 But we take cristatus to be a perfect participle, and put ater in the ablative of instru- 

 ment ; there being no such word as atricristatus, unless we coin it. We consider the word 

 equal to cristatus atro, conformably with usage in Picus albo-larvatus, Tyrannus aurantio-atro- 

 cristatus, &c. Compare also the actual Latin auro-clavatus, striped with golden. 



43. L. woll-web'-gr-i. To Wollweber. 



44. Pa'-rus a-tri-cap-fl'-lus. Lat. parus, a titmouse ; etymology in question, but apparently 



pants for parvus, small, petty, like the actual adverb parum, little ; Gr. iraupos, of same 

 signification, th. iravu; cf . pau-cus, pau-lus, pau-per, &c. Lat. atricapillus, black-hair (ed) ; 

 capillus, hair of the head ; a diminutive, allied to caput, and Gr. Kt(f>a\-fi, the head. Com- 

 pare English capillary, thready, hair-like, i. e., as fine as a hair. Notice atri-, not atro-; 

 cf. Lophophanes, No. 42. If the compound were with capillatus, it would be atrocapillatus. 



45. P. a. sep-ten-tri-6-na'-Hs. Lat. septentrionalis, northern ; scptemtriones (septem and trio) 



being the constellation of seven stars near the north pole. 



46. P. a. oc-cTd-en-ta'-Hs. Lat. occidentalis, western ; occido, I fall ; i. e., where the sun sets. 



47. P. ca-r61-ln-en'-sls. See Mimus, No. 16. 



48. P. mon-ta'-nus. Lat. montanus, relating to a mountain ; mons, genitive mentis, a mountain. 



49. P. hud-s6n'-i-cus. Latinized from the name of Henry Hudson, discoverer of the region. 



