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Motacilla and family
The White Wagtail ( Motacilla alba ) is a small passerine bird in the wagtail family Motacillidae, which also includes the pipits and longclaws.
The true wagtails are part of the genus Motacilla in the family Motacillidae and are not close relatives of the fantails.
The Grey Wagtail ( Motacilla cinerea ) is a small member of the wagtail family, Motacillidae.
The Yellow Wagtail ( Motacilla flava ) is a small passerine in the wagtail family Motacillidae, which also includes the pipits and longclaws.
The Citrine Wagtail or Yellow-headed Wagtail ( Motacilla citreola ) is a small songbird in the family Motacillidae.
The White-browed Wagtail or Large Pied Wagtail ( Motacilla maderaspatensis ) is a medium-sized bird and is the largest member of the wagtail family.

Motacilla and genus
The wagtails form the passerine bird genus Motacilla.
The Forest Wagtail belongs to the monotypic genus Dendronanthus which is closely related to Motacilla and sometimes included herein.
Within the wagtail genus Motacilla, the White Wagtail's closest relatives appear to be other black-and-white wagtails such as the Japanese Wagtail, Motacilla grandis, and the White-browed Wagtail, Motacilla madaraspatensis, ( and possibly the Mekong Wagtail, Motacilla samveasnae, the phylogenetic position of which is mysterious ) with which it appears to form a superspecies.
It is unrelated to the true wagtails of the genus Motacilla ; it is a member of the fantail genus Rhipidura and is a part of a ' core corvine ' group that includes true crows and ravens, drongos and birds of paradise.
The Willow Warbler was first scientifically described by Linnaeus in his Systema Naturae in 1758 under the genus Motacilla.
It is a slender, 15. 5 – 17 cm long bird, with the long, constantly wagging tail characteristic of the genus Motacilla.
The species name aurocapilla is a noun phrase, so the original spelling is retained, not changed according to the gender of the genus name ; Linnaeus originally named it Motacilla aurocapilla, and the ending is not to be changed to-us as commonly cited in the past.
He named it Motacilla cyanea because its tail reminded him of the European Wagtails of the genus Motacilla.
This is a distinctive wagtail, the only one placed in the genus Dendronanthus ( all other wagtails are placed in Motacilla ).

Motacilla and name
The European Robin was one of the many species originally described by Linnaeus in his 18th century work, Systema Naturae, under the name of Motacilla rubecula.
The White Wagtail was one of the many species originally described by Linnaeus in his 18th century work, Systema Naturae, and it still bears its original name of Motacilla alba.
The name had been in use colloquially for the Pied subspecies of the White Wagtail ( Motacilla alba ) on the Isle of Man, and Northern Ireland.
In addition, a race of Blue-headed Wagtail ( Motacilla flava beema ) was given the common name Sykes's Wagtail in British Birds ( 1907 ).

Motacilla and tail
Apart from its unusual plumage pattern and habitat, the Forest Wagtail differs from its Motacilla relatives in its strange habit of swaying its tail from side to side, not wagging it up and down like other wagtails.

Motacilla and .
The grey wagtail ( Motacilla cinerea ) also uses the rich food supplies of the mountain brooks.
For example, Motacilla alba alba ( often abbreviated Motacilla a. alba ) is the nominotypical subspecies of the White Wagtail ( Motacilla alba ).
This species was first described by Linnaeus in his Systema naturae in 1758 as Motacilla oenanthe.
Prehistoric wagtails known from fossils are Motacilla humata and Motacilla major.
Other phylogenetic studies using mtDNA however suggest that there is considerable gene flow within the races and the resulting closeness makes Motacilla alba a single species.
The nominate subspecies Motacilla alba alba is basically grey above and white below, with a white face, black cap and black throat.
Image: Motacilla cinerea 4 Luc Viatour. jpg | Nominate in Belgium

root and family
These include root vegetables ( potatoes and carrots ), bulbs ( onion family ), leaf vegetables ( spinach and lettuce ), stem vegetables ( bamboo shoots and asparagus ), and inflorescence vegetables ( globe artichokes and broccoli and other vegetables such as cabbage or cauliflower ).
Although by far the majority of plants able to form nitrogen-fixing root nodules are in the legume family Fabaceae, there are a few exceptions:
This is the oldest poker family ; the root of the game as now played was a game known as Primero, which evolved into the game three-card brag, a very popular gentleman's game around the time of the American Revolutionary War and still enjoyed in the U. K. today.
In order to communicate and pray every clan and sometimes each family root have their own vodun sometimes called Assanyì as vodun can also be translated as “ The spirit of those who have passed before us ”.
The " SIBO " family name stood for " SIxteen Bit Organiser " and the improved version of the OPL language ( with window and focus controls ) was at the root of what was later sold as the Symbian operating system, which until 2010 was the most widely used OS in smartphones, being in 2011 displaced by Google's Android OS.
They belong to a family of Elvish languages, that originate in Common Eldarin, the language common to all Eldar, which in turn originates in Primitive Quendian, the common root of Eldarin and Avarin languages.
Both sushi and sashimi are served with soy sauce and wasabi paste ( a Japanese horseradish root, a spice with extremely strong hot flavor ), thinly-sliced pickled ginger root, and a simple garnish such as shiso ( a kitchen herb, member of the mint family ) or finely shredded daikon radish, or both.
Cassava ( Manihot esculenta ), also called yuca, mogo, manioc, mandioca, tapioca and kamoting kahoy, a woody shrub of the Euphorbiaceae ( spurge family ) native to South America, is extensively cultivated as an annual crop in tropical and subtropical regions for its edible starchy, tuberous root, a major source of carbohydrates.
It may also mean " against men " since men were dominant in the Ancient Greek family structure, and Antigone clearly defied masculine authority, or " anti-generative ", from the root gonē, " that which generates " ( related: gonos, "- gony "; seed, semen ).
In the U. S., the word château took root selectively, in the Gilded Age resort town of Newport, Rhode Island, the châteaux were called “ cottages ”, but, north of Wilmington, Delaware, in the rich, rural “ Château Country ” centred upon the powerful Du Pont family, château is used with its original definition.
Comfrey ( Symphytum officinale L .) is a perennial herb of the family Boraginaceae with a black, turnip-like root and large, hairy broad leaves that bears small bell-shaped flowers of various colours, typically cream or purplish, which may be striped.
Nhu used the Cần Lao, which he organised into cells, to infiltrate every part of society to root out opposition to the Ngô family.
The Bambusoideae are in the family Poaceae, as they all have fibrous root systems, cylindrical stems, sheathing leaves with parallel-veined blades, and inflorescences with spikelets.
He is both a member of the Rada family and a root, or ( Old French ) racine Loa.
The radish ( Raphanus sativus ) is an edible root vegetable of the Brassicaceae family that was domesticated in Europe, in pre-Roman times.
Its discoverers claim that, on the basis of 268 characters sampled from all major Mesozoic mammal clades and principal eutherian families of the Cretaceous, Eomaia is placed at the root of the eutherian " family tree " along with Murtoilestes and Prokennalestes.
A chine is a long extension of the wing root along the forward fuselage, first seen on the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird family.
Y-chromosomal Adam is positioned at the root of the family tree as the Y chromosomes of all living males are descended from his Y chromosome.
The root word is the primary lexical unit of a word, and of a word family ( root is then called base word ), which carries the most significant aspects of semantic content and cannot be reduced into smaller constituents.
A sister, or daughter, Albertina, of this Prince Antonio Octavio, would be the first root for the Spanish ducal title, Dukes of Tserclaes, bestowed in July 1856 by Queen Isabella II of Spain to members of the Guzman, Perez de Guzman, family, living in Jerez and Sevilla, Spain.
With his newly acquired wealth, McKay purchased the site overlooking both the Ottawa and Rideau Rivers and built a stone villa where he and his family lived until 1855 and which became the root of the present day Rideau Hall.
The name Mihirakula is thought to be derived from Mithra-kula which is Iranian for " the Sun family ", with kula having the same root as Pashto kul, " family ".

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