26 
Ex. 
XLIII. CHAT- 
TERER. 
Ex. 
XLIV. COLY. 
Ex. 
PASSERINE. 
Toes, the middle joined to the outmofb as far as the fir ft joint ; 
back toe very large. 
Fieldfare, Br. Zool. fol. P. II. 
Blackbirds, Br. Zool I. tab. XLVII. 
urdus of Linnaeus and BriJJon II. 
Linnaeus has XXVIII fpecies, BriJJon LXIV. 
Bill, {trait, a little convex above, and bending towards the point ; 
near the end of the upper mandible, a fmall notch on each 
fide. 
Nostrils, hid in briftles. 
Middle Toe, clofely connected at the bafe to the ontmofL 
The Pompadour, Edw. CCCXLI. 
Ampelis of Linnaeus (from up irtXoc, a vine); becaufe the Bohe- 
mian Chatterer, the bird he places at the head of this genus, 
feeds fometimes on grapes. Fie reckons VII fpecies. The 
Cotinga of BriJJon II. 339. an American name. He has X fpe- 
cies. Inhabits Europe and America. 
Bill, convex above, ftrait beneath; very fhort and thick. 
Nostrils, fmall, placed at the bafe, and hid by the feathers. 
Tongue, not the length of the bill, laciniated at the end. 
Toes, divided to their origin. 
Le Colon, BriJJon III. part I. tab. XVI. fig. 2. 
Inhabits Africa. 
Linnaeus includes this among his Loxia. BriJJon III .part I. 304. 
calls it Colins . 
Bill, 
