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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: THE-TOO |
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TODY, T . Pennant's rendering (Gen. Birds, pp. 15, 61) through the French Todier of M. J. Brisson (Ornithologie, iv. 528) of the somewhat obscure Latin word Todus,l not unhappily applied in 1756 by Patrick
sparrow " or " green humming-bird " of Sir H. Sloane (Voyage, ii. 306). The name, having been, taken up by Brisson (loc. cit.) in 1760, was adopted by Linnaeus, and has since been recognized by ornithologists as thatIn Forcellini's Lexicon
semper
Plautus , cited by this same Festus. It stands " cum extritis [extortis] talis, cum todillis [todinis] crusculis "; but the passage is held by scholars to be corrupt. Among naturalists Gesner in 1555 gave currency (Hisl. animalium, iii. 719) to the word as a substantive, and it is found in Levins's Manipulus vocabulorum of 1570 (ed. Wheatley, 1867, col. 225) as the equivalent of the English " tit-mouse." Ducange allows the existence of the adjective todinus. Stephanus suggests that todi comes from rvrOoi, but his view is not accepted. The verb todere may perhaps be Englished to " toddle "of a valid genus, though many species have been referred to it which are now known to have no affinity to the type, the Todus viridis of Jamaica, and accordingly have since been removed from it. The genus Todus was at one time placed among the Muscicapidae (cf. FLYCATCHER); but J. Murie's investigations (Prot. Zool. Society, 1872, pp. 664680, ph lv.) have conclusively proved that it is not passerine, and is nearly allied to the Momotidae (cf. MOTMOT) and Alcedinidae (cf. KINGFISHER). it being regarded as forming a distinct sub-family Todinae of the Momotidae peculiar to the Greater Antilles, each of which islands has its own species, all of small size, the largest not exceeding four inches and a half in length.Of the species already named, T. viridis, P. H. Gosse (B. Jamaica, From 7280) gives an interesting account. " Always conspicuous from its bright grass-green, coat and, crimson-velvet gorget, it is S(After Gosse.) Tody (Todus viridis). still a very tame bird; yet this seems rather the tameness of indifference than of confidence ; it will allow a person to approach very near, and, if disturbed, alight on another twig a few yards distant . . commonly it is seen sitting patiently on a twig, with the head drawn
watch
All the four species of Todus, as now restricted, present a general similarity of appearance , and possess very similar habits; and even these, by some ornithologists, might be regarded as geographical races. The Cuban form is T. multicolor; that of Haiti is T. subulatus or dominicensis; and that of Porto
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