Urraca
Replies
I´ve found a new meaning for Urraca: it comes from latin "furax": thief, because the magpie uses to steal the eggs from other nests.
EG
EG
I already asked that ages ago, along with several other names. Devonelisa (who's sadly MIA, and has been for some time now :-() answered: http://snipurl.com/8imh.
Miranda
"...his fingers trailing over your belly, your thighs quacking..." — From a The Lord of the Rings crapfic
Proud adopter of 15 punctuation marks. See my profile for their names.
"...his fingers trailing over your belly, your thighs quacking..." — From a The Lord of the Rings crapfic
Proud adopter of 15 punctuation marks. See my profile for their names.
Urraca has germanic origin (comes from "uro") and defines the magpie.
There's a cartoon known as "Something magpies" where the magpies are called Heckle and Jeckle. In Spanish, we know them as Tuco and Tico, and the cartoon is "Las urracas parlanchinas" (The chatterbox [or talkative]magpies). EG.
There's a cartoon known as "Something magpies" where the magpies are called Heckle and Jeckle. In Spanish, we know them as Tuco and Tico, and the cartoon is "Las urracas parlanchinas" (The chatterbox [or talkative]magpies). EG.