The crow's caw could be cawed! Scram!" "Yaya,""Zhiwa,""Wa-wah,""Yayaya,""Scrape,""Bitter!" Bitter!" "Mute,""high-pitched,""deep,""sharp,""mournful,""gloomy," and other adjectives. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
The crows could call for many reasons. From the perspective of population activities and social communication, when a crow found food or was attacked, other crows would surround it, communicate and coordinate their actions to protect and help it by constantly calling and calling. In addition, when birds or animals died, crows would gather together and make sharp calls, but scientists believed that this might be a sign of group activity and social communication, rather than a sense of death. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
Crows were large songbirds with thick beaks and feet, round nostrils, and usually covered by feathers. Different kinds of crows had different appearances. For example, the bald crow was pure black with a purple metallic luster, and the base of its beak was grayish-white. The jackdaw was slightly smaller in size, with the back of its neck and lower body from chest to abdomen white, and the rest of its feathers were pure black. The large-mouthed crow was pure black, with a green metallic luster on the upper body, a pale green luster on the lower body, and a thick mouth. The small-mouthed crow was pure black, with a blue-green luster except for the abdomen, and its mouth was short and thin. The crows 'caws were low, and they were " caw, caw, caw ". The large-mouthed crows' caws were thick wa, wa syllables, while the small-mouthed crows 'caws were more quivering, and the length of their caws was slightly longer than the large-mouthed crows. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
Crows 'caws could be described in many ways, such as " coo coo ", which usually produced a sound similar to " coo ";, high-pitched " quack ", low " quack ", sharp " aww ", and also " quack " and " scrape!" Scram!" "Yaya,""Zhiwa,""Wa-wah,""Yayaya,""Scrape,""Bitter!" Bitter!" "Mute" could also be used to describe its voice. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
In different cultures and beliefs, there were different views on whether it was unlucky to hear a crow's cry. In some cultures, crows were considered unlucky. For example, in Western countries, the crow's cry was thought to represent the arrival of misfortune and disease. It was said that when the crow's cry was loud, there would be natural disasters or wars. In traditional Chinese culture, many people believed that hearing the crow's cry that was not in a group meant bad things, such as death, disease, disaster, etc. There was also a saying in the folk,"When a crow cries at home, disaster is coming." However, in other cultures, crows were regarded as auspicious symbols. In Japan, crows were regarded as the incarnation of gods, and their cries were regarded as the call of gods. In China before the Tang Dynasty, crows were divine birds with auspicious and prophetic functions. There was a saying of "crows reporting good news". People called the sun "Jinwu", which implied good luck and beauty. Huainanzi also recorded that "crows reporting good news, there was Zhou Xing". The modern view was that although the crow's cry was considered to have a certain omen significance, these signs were not absolute and should not be overly superstitious. People should maintain rational thinking and a scientific attitude. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
The idiom describing the crow's cry is "completely silent". This idiom means that there is no sound of crows or sparrows, and it is very quiet. It comes from the Song Dynasty. Shi Daoyuan's Jingde Chuandeng Lu, Volume 4:"The Lord said: 'The crow is silent, what can be heard?'" There was also Su Shi's "Three Quatrains" of the Song Dynasty: "The wind blows the rain into the railing, and the magpies silently head to the railing at night." There was also a poem called "The Crow Crying at the Setting Moon", which described the scene when the sky was about to turn bright. It came from the poem "Maple Bridge Moored at Night" by Tang Zhang Ji: "The Crow Crying at the Setting Moon is full of frost, and the river maple fisherman's fire is sad and sleepy." In addition, from the perspective of the crow's cry, there was an idiom called " an ominous omen." "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
In different cultures and situations, the crow's cry had different meanings. In some Western cultures, crows were regarded as ominous omens. Their cries represented the arrival of misfortune and disease. Legend had it that when their cries were high, they could indicate natural disasters or wars. In Japanese culture, crows were regarded as the incarnation of gods, and their cries were regarded as the call of gods. In traditional China culture, the situation was more complicated. The ancestors believed that the crow's cry was a sign that something good was about to happen to different people, or it could be an ominous sign of disaster, disease, or death. However, they also emphasized that these signs should not be overly believed, and should rely more on one's own strength and hard work. In addition, the crow's cry could also indicate weather changes. For example, in the United Kingdom, the crow's cry was thought to indicate rain or cold weather. In the United States, when the crow's cry was short and high, it could indicate that a storm was coming. From the perspective of modern science, these signs had no scientific basis. They were just concepts in cultural traditions. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
The cry of a crow is usually described as a " wah " sound, but in fact, crows can make a variety of different cries. These cries may have different meanings, such as different cultures and situations may indicate different things. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
There were many poems that described the sad and lonely feeling of the crow's cry. For example, Wang Jian's " White crows perched on the trees in the courtyard, cold dew silently wet osmanthus flowers." I wonder whose home my autumn thoughts will fall on tonight." The crows in this poem perched on the trees in the courtyard, creating a cold atmosphere. There were also 'Withered vines, old trees, crows, small bridges, and flowing water.' The crows here also gave off a lonely feeling. In addition, Bai Juyi described in the poem "Crying at Night" that "Crying Crow lost its mother and was mute and mournful. Night after night I cry half a cry, and those who hear it are stained with tears." Through the sorrowful cries of the ravens in the middle of the night, they showed their sorrowful feelings. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
In ancient times, the term used to describe the crow's cry was 'mute.' For example, in the poem 'Crow Crying at Night' by Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty,'The crows on the edge of Yellow Cloud City want to perch, and they fly back to the mute branches to cry.' There was also the word "". For example, in classical Chinese,"" was an onomatopoeic word used to describe the cry of crows. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!
The crow's cry could be described as a hoarse and monotonous sound like "ah, ah, ah". In some of the sound effects descriptions, there were also descriptions such as "crows flying over ah ~","crows crowing in the evening","croaking in a house near Ostankinskiy", and so on. "The Crow's Testimony" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to read it!