srin bya: Difference between revisions

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owl, long-eared owl, screech owl, or nocturnal bird. Lit. "worm owl" (''[[srin bu]]'i bya'') or "ghost bird" (''[[srin po]]'i bya''), the latter being the usual reading, the ghastly associations surely due to the nocturnal activities of these birds. The exact species seems somewhat unclear, and more research is needed, but it is possibly ''Asio otus (otus linneaus)'', the northern long-eared owl, a species with a very large range extending across northern Eurasia as well as Mediterranean islands, northwestern Africa, the Middle East and northern Pakistan, with isolated populations in the Azores, China and Tibet. [Erick Tsiknopoulos]  
owl, long-eared owl, screech owl, or nocturnal bird. Lit. "worm owl" (''[[srin bu]]'i bya'') or "ghost bird" (''[[srin po]]'i bya''), the latter being the usual reading, the ghastly associations surely due to the nocturnal activities of these birds. The exact species seems somewhat unclear, and more research is needed, but it is possibly ''Asio otus (otus linneaus)'', the northern long-eared owl, a species with a very large range extending across northern Eurasia as well as Mediterranean islands, northwestern Africa, the Middle East and northern Pakistan, with isolated populations in the Azores, China and Tibet. [Erick Tsiknopoulos]  


(med) Owl ? (Phrin Las 1987). The thangka image in Phrin Las does not depict an owl. The rounded beek could recall an Ibisbill (Ibidorhyncha struthersii), zo mchu chu bya ('sickle-beak water bird'). The name srin bya could come from srin bu, worms, which the bird seeks with his beek under the river stones. Just a suggestion (comm. tibetbirds). The Ibisbill is a bird related to the waders. It is grey with a white belly, red legs and long down-curved bill, and a black face and black breast band. It occurs on the shingle riverbanks of the high plateau of central Asia and the Himalayas (avibase). [[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 19:32, 6 December 2021 (UTC)  
(med) Owl ? (Phrin Las 1987). The thangka image in Phrin Las does not depict an owl. The rounded beak could recall an Ibisbill (Ibidorhyncha struthersii), zo mchu chu bya ('sickle-beak water bird'). The name srin bya could come from srin bu, worms, which the bird seeks with his beak under the river stones. Just a suggestion (comm. tibetbirds). The Ibisbill is a bird related to the waders. It is grey with a white belly, red legs and long down-curved bill, and a black face and black breast band. It occurs on the shingle riverbanks of the high plateau of central Asia and the Himalayas (avibase). [[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 19:32, 6 December 2021 (UTC)  


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Revision as of 15:06, 6 December 2021

This is the RYI Dictionary content as presented on the site http://rywiki.tsadra.org/, which is being changed fundamentally and will become hard to use within the GoldenDict application. If you are using GoldenDict, please either download and import the rydic2003 file from DigitalTibetan (WayBack Machine version as the site was shut down in November 2021).

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སྲིན་བྱ
screech owl; 'ug pa [RY]

owl?, asio otus linnaeus, demon-bird, nocturnal bird, owl [JV]

owl [IW]

owl, long-eared owl, screech owl, or nocturnal bird. Lit. "worm owl" (srin bu'i bya) or "ghost bird" (srin po'i bya), the latter being the usual reading, the ghastly associations surely due to the nocturnal activities of these birds. The exact species seems somewhat unclear, and more research is needed, but it is possibly Asio otus (otus linneaus), the northern long-eared owl, a species with a very large range extending across northern Eurasia as well as Mediterranean islands, northwestern Africa, the Middle East and northern Pakistan, with isolated populations in the Azores, China and Tibet. [Erick Tsiknopoulos]

(med) Owl ? (Phrin Las 1987). The thangka image in Phrin Las does not depict an owl. The rounded beak could recall an Ibisbill (Ibidorhyncha struthersii), zo mchu chu bya ('sickle-beak water bird'). The name srin bya could come from srin bu, worms, which the bird seeks with his beak under the river stones. Just a suggestion (comm. tibetbirds). The Ibisbill is a bird related to the waders. It is grey with a white belly, red legs and long down-curved bill, and a black face and black breast band. It occurs on the shingle riverbanks of the high plateau of central Asia and the Himalayas (avibase). Johannes Schmidt (talk) 19:32, 6 December 2021 (UTC)