The explanation of cormorants

the explanation of cormorant is also called "cormorant". 1. Waterbird name. Commonly known as osprey and water crow. Feathers are black and have a green luster, with a small throat sac under the chin, a long mouth and a hook at the tip of the upper mouth. They are good at diving and preying on fish. Fishermen often domesticate them to catch fish. Ji Sheng Fu by Yan Zhitui in the Northern Qi Dynasty: "The turtle lies in its yin, and the cormorant is pregnant in its mouth." Tang Du Fu's poem "Tian She" reads: "The cormorant is sunny in the west, and its wings are covered with fish beams." Ming Li Shizhen's Compendium of Materia Medica A Cormorant: "Cormorants can be found everywhere in water towns. It looks small and black. It is also like a crow, whose beak is slightly curved, and it is good to get fish without water. It gathers in the island and nests in the forest at night, and the dung poison will make the wood dry for a long time. Southern fishing boats often lick dozens of livestock and make them fish. " 2. The provincial name of Cormorant. Ming Xia Wanchun's "Yan Wen": "Sanggan Xiaohe, the night shore of the cormorant, the clear flow and the bright hope, the element is full of waves." 3. The provincial name of the cormorant. Yuan Luo Zhiren's "Mulan Flowers Slow and No Brewing" words: "Cormorants and parrots, and tea ou, Pu Tao brewed green, fantasy fragrance." The explanation of word decomposition owl (owl) → [cormorant] Waterbird, with black feathers, a flat and long bill and a hook at the tip. Good at fishing, fishermen often use it to fish. Also known as "Osprey", "Black Ghost" and "Water Crow". (owl) radical: bird; See "Chen" for the explanation of Chen. Radical: birds.