CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 69 



/^70. Tyrannus verticalis Say, b 126. c 244. r soe. 



Arkansas Tyrant Flycatcher. 



/ 



371. Tyrannus vociferans Sw. b 127. c 245. r sot. 



Cassiu's Tyrant Flycatcher. 



372. Tyrannus melancholicus couchi (Bd.) Coues. b 12s, 129. c 246. r sos. 



Couch's Tyrant Flycatcher. 



373. Myiarchus crinitus (L.) Cab. B iso. c 247. R 312. 



Great Crested Flycatcher. [See Addenda, No. 880. 



374. Myiarchus erythrocercus Scl. and Salv. ? b 132 ? c — . R an, (?) 



Rufous-tailed Crested Flycatcher. 



375. Myiarchus cinerescens (Lawr.) Scl. b 131. c 248. R 313. 



Ash-throated Crested Flycatcher. 



376. Myiarchus lawrencii (Gir.) Bd. b. 133, c 249, R 3X4, (!m,) 



Lawrence's Crested Flycatcher. 



377. Sayiornis sayi (Bp.) Bd. b i36. c 250. R 3i6. 



Say's Pewit Flycatcher. 



370. T. ver-ti-ca'-lis. Lat. verticalis, vertical, i. e., relating to the vertex, top or crown of the 



head, which has a flame-colored patch. The etymological meaning of vertex is vortex, the 

 turning or whirling thing, from verto, I turn. 



371. T. v5-cl'-fer-ans. Lat. present participle vociferans, vociferating, vociferous, from vocifero; 



vox, genitive vocis, voice, undjero, I bear. 



372. T. mel-an-chor-i-cus. Gr. iJ.e\ayxo\iK6s, melancholy, from fie\as, feminine fueKaiva, black, 



and xoAos, gall, bile ; Lat. mekniclwlictts, atrabilious. The ancients had some notions on 

 tills subject which make the term not wholly inapplicable to a bird of splenetic, irri- 

 table disposition, as all of this genus are. — To Lt. D. N. Couch, U. S. A., who collected 

 extensively in Matamoras and Texas. 



373. Myi-ar'-chus cri-ni'-tus [not " crinnytus," as usually heard]. Gr. nv7a, a fly, and apx^s, 



a ruler, leader, chief, from &px<e, I am first, lead, rule, or apxv, tlie beginning. This 

 theme is seen in our prefix arch-, as arch-bishop, &c. — Lat. crinitus, haired, i. e., crested, 

 from crinis, hair of the head. See Myiodioctes, No. 14G. 



374. M. 6-ryth-r6-cer'-cias. Gr. ipv0p6s, reddish, and Kfpiws, tail. 



Not in the Check List, orig. ed. Since discovered in Texas by G. B. Sennett. The 

 proper name of the species is much in question. The bird is the M. crinitus erythrocercus 

 of Coues, Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., iv, no. 2, p. 32, and v, no. 3, p. 402 ; the M. eryth- 

 rocercus var. cooperi of Ridgway, Pr. Nat. Mus., i, p. 138; and the M. mcxicanus of Ridg., 

 Pr. Nat. Mus., ii, p. 14. 



375. M. cln-er-es'-cens. Lat. present participle of an inceptive verb cincresco, I grow ashy ; 



in the sense of being somewliat ashy; cinereus, ashy, from cinis, ash. N. B. — The 

 name has always been written cinerascens, for which we find no authority; while there 

 is actually a verb cineresco : we therefore emend as above. 



376. M. law-ren'-cl-l. To George Newbold Lawrence, of New York. 



377. Say-i-6r'-nl3 say'-i. " Sayornis" is a violent combination of the name of Mr. Thomas 



Say, of Pliiladelphia, with the Greek word for bird, Spvis. It may be somewhat improved 

 as above, when tlie combination of vowels becomes no more unusual than is seen in 

 myio-dioctes, myia-rchus, &c. In equally loose style, Bonaparte made the specific name 

 sayus, — a direct Latinization of the same person's name; but it must either be put in 



