Use "gulls" in a sentence

1. Gulls swooped and planed overhead.

2. ‘Petrels, Albatrosses, cormorants, frigatebirds, gulls etc

3. In hell, at least the gulls are contented.

4. The few gulls, mewing aimlessly, circle in, alighting.

5. The gulls flew off, wings flapping.

6. Hundreds of gulls were circling overhead.

7. Bonaparte’s Gulls are sleek, small gulls that breed in the boreal forest and winter farther south on ocean coasts, lakes, and rivers

8. With the dawn came the gulls looking for breakfast.

9. 15 The few gulls, mewing aimlessly, circle in, alighting.

10. Two gulls were fighting over a morsel of food.

11. I see a couple of gulls, but-

12. Cover offal will a net to prevent access by gulls.

13. This species looks distinctly different from other gulls.

14. Bonaparte’s Gulls are sleek, small gulls that breed in the boreal forest and winter farther south on ocean coasts, lakes, and rivers

15. When the fog lifted a tiny bit, I was able to distinguish the mix of species in the roost -- mainly herring gulls and ring-billed gulls but also a few Bonaparte's and laughing gulls, all ruled over by a few great black backs, the Burgomeister …

16. Robbing efficiency was clearly higher in albatrosses than gulls.

17. These are the gulls you're most likely to see far away from coastal areas—in fact, most Ring-Billed Gulls nest in the interior of the continent, near freshwater.

18. And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea - gulls crying.

19. Flocks of gulls curiously hovered around us , swooping up and down .

20. A bundle of old clothes - what would gulls want with that?

21. The sky sweats, copper haze blears the horizon for tomorrow's storm the gulls Annunciate

22. There was a flock of gulls now, wheeling and mewing just below the bridge.

23. 26 Lesser Black-backed Gulls nest on the cliffs periodically, as do Black Redstarts.

24. I've made designs for ships that will skim the waves like gulls, outrace anything afloat.

25. 5 Begrimed by obscure use, otiose warehouses shadowed the rigid,(www.Sentencedict.com) corky bobbing of gulls.

26. Antarctica is home to penguins, seals, visiting whales, gulls, krill, albatross and more

27. And The flung Spray and the blown spume, and the sea - gulls crying.

28. In spring those cliffs are alive with auks and gulls, and my favourite bird, the gannet.

29. And the water is again perfectly blue, the gulls and cormorants fishing as always.

30. 9 If marauding gulls appear, the aunties sound an alarm and the young cluster tightly around them.

31. 24 Begrimed by obscure use, otiose warehouses shadowed the rigid, corky bobbing of gulls.

32. Some have to compete with gulls and rats, as they comb through refuse dumps looking for food!

33. Marauding birds such as herring gulls will grab and swallow a chick if they get a chance.

34. It is one of the world's rarest gulls, with a population of 4,000 – 6,500 pairs.

35. During the winter months, great flocks of gulls gather at rubbish tips and sewage outfalls.

36. The downy chicks of terns and gulls are so patterned that they are almost invisible crouching on shingle.

37. Cormorant young and eggs are prey to larger predatory birds like eagles, gulls, and crows

38. Familiar acrobats of the air, Ring-Billed Gulls nimbly pluck tossed tidbits from on high

39. In the brush warblers and finches are trilling again; raspberries glisten; the gulls are laughing.

40. 10 Marauding birds such as herring gulls will grab and swallow a chick if they get a chance.

41. Icebergs that last for a week or longer provide perches for bald eagles, cormorants and gulls.

42. They were like a great flock of gulls swooping to tear and gobble at their prey.

43. The gulls mewed and the sand shifted and the swan hurtled down and it was easy.

44. 26 The eldritch gulls, who navigate with their far-flung friends the rowdy sea-air above London, complicated the dream.

45. Local chargepayers and the environment will benefit ... only the gulls will lose out on their usual titbits.

46. Intraspecific and interspecific kleptoparasitism were significantly more frequent than expected in Kelp Gulls and Black-browed Albatrosses, respectively.

47. Departures of ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) from a breeding colony were significantly clumped in time and space.

48. 5 hours ago · Ring-Billed Gulls are one of the most familiar gulls in North America due to their prevalence around dumps, parking lots, and beaches, where their bold, french fry-stealing antics have earned them a negative reputation

49. Bell bird Control focuses on pigeons, sparrows, starlings, and gulls with solutions that are safe for people and animals

50. 25 The downy chicks of terns and gulls are so patterned that they are almost invisible crouching on shingle.

51. The eldritch gulls, who navigate with their far-flung friends the rowdy sea-air above London, complicated the dream.

52. Along the way, debris, pitfalls, crabs, gulls, raccoons, and other threats will claim roughly 50 percent of those who rose from the sand.

53. The persistence with which they fly down their victims is quite distinct from the desultory mutual robbery of immature gulls.

54. 27 Immatures best told from other large immature gulls by distinctive shape of bill, heavy and appearing to droop at tip.

55. The accumulation of fish waste on the shore can promote the proliferation of bacteria and parasites and attract rodents and scavenger birds (gulls).

56. The rate of gut 22Na uptake was the same in ducks and gulls and was not affected by seawater acclimation in either species.

57. Birds of the Northeast: Gulls to Great Auks features paintings, sculpture, prints, drawings, photographs, and natural history specimens from the early 19th century through the present day

58. The summer adult's body is white and its back and wings are much darker grey than all other gulls of similar size except the larger laughing gull.

59. 18 13Oil-smeared pelican eggs in a nest on Cat Island, home to hundreds of the species, as well as gulls and roseate spoonbills.

60. A total of 17 different groups of seabirds were taken into account, including: loons, grebes, fulmars and petrels, shearwaters, pelicans, cormorants, shorebirds, gulls and kittawakes, terns, skimmers, and Alcids

61. This is the biggest and Burliest of the three jaeger species, which are fast, agile relatives of gulls known for harrying and stealing from other seabirds

62. Four of the primary types of birds which can be observed in deserts during the winter are various types of waders and gulls, coots, and little grebes.

63. The accumulation of fish waste on the shore can promote the proliferation of bacteria and parasites and attract rodents and scavenger birds (gulls, Corvidae, etc.). Potential 6.01

64. The accumulation of fish waste on the shore can promote the proliferation of bacteria and parasites and attract rodents and scavenger birds (gulls, Corvidae, etc.). CUMULATIVE Potential 6.01

65. In fact, the rate of intraspecific aggression in native gulls was higher in pairs breeding in proximity to the expansive species than in those breeding far away from it.

66. ‘Arctic terns, Mew gulls, scaup, shoveler, buffleheads, Baldpates, yellow legs and various passerines were observed.’ ‘Examples of dabbling ducks are the mallards, cinnamon teals, shovellers, green and blue-winged teals, pintails, black ducks, Baldpates and gadwalls.’

67. Blomqvist and Elander (1981) suggest that the main food of the Ross’s Gull is small fish and invertebrates. In Alaska, Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida) comprised the majority of the diet of Ross’s Gulls (Divoky 1976).

68. ‘Black Crested gulls swirled along the atmosphere; the air was permanently imbued with the scent of salt and fish, fresh or otherwise.’ ‘With a bit of luck the pair of Crested cranes, presently living in the reserve, can be spotted in all their splendour as an added bonus.’

69. At any time several hundred craft of ail nations maiy bo soeu in the Bay ef Gibraltar; while oonterging or diverging toward tad from the narrow strait dividing two continents, are ever ia view stately processions of the trade Argosies of the world; •ome under sails whim aa sea-gulls’ wings, and some trailing behind their huge funnels what

70. The Birds (a volume of the Life Nature Library) gives more details, saying: “Soaring birds, with a large sail surface in proportion to their weight, fall into two very different types: (1) those with broad wings and fanlike tails as exemplified by many of the hawks, eagles and vultures, and (2) those with extremely long but relatively narrow wings, ocean wanderers such as gulls, frigate birds and albatrosses.”

71. Birds are divided into eight main visual categories: (1) swimmers—ducks and ducklike birds, (2) aerialists—gulls and gull-like birds, (3) long-legged waders—herons and cranes, (4) smaller waders—plover and sandpipers, (5) fowllike birds—grouse and quail, (6) birds of prey—hawks, eagles, and owls, (7) passerine (perching) birds, and (8) nonpasserine land birds.—A Field Guide to the Birds East of the Rockies, by Roger Tory Peterson.

72. This page is a cloud between whose fraying edges a headland with mountains appears Brokenly then is hidden again until what emerges from the now cloudless blue is the grooved sea and the whole self-naming island, its ochre verges, its shadow-plunged valleys and a coiled road threading the fishing villages, the white, silent surges of combers along the coast, where a line of gulls has arrowed