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10 birds with hilariously perverted names and where travellers can find them

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - May 16, 2026, 20:13 IST
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1/11

10 birds with hilariously perverted names and where travellers can find them

Birdwatching becomes significantly harder when you’re trying not to laugh. The world of bird names is full of accidental comedy, especially when Victorian-era naturalists, regional slang, and unfortunate English word combinations collide. Some bird names sound rude, others sound like insults, and a few seem like they were invented by sleep-deprived ornithologists with a dangerous sense of humour.
Here are 10 real birds with names that routinely make travellers, birders, and internet users do a double take.

2/11

Blue-footed Booby

Where to find it: Ecuador’s Galápagos Islands
The undisputed king of unintentionally hilarious bird names. “Booby” comes from the Spanish word bobo, meaning foolish or clownish, because sailors thought these birds looked comically awkward on land. Add the bright blue feet, exaggerated mating dances, and permanently confused expression, and the name becomes even harder to take seriously.

3/11

Great Tit

Where to find it: Across Europe and parts of Asia, including northern India
Birdwatchers have spent decades trying to say this name with a straight face. The Great Tit is actually a striking yellow-and-black songbird commonly seen in forests and gardens. Unfortunately, every conversation involving this bird immediately sounds fake. “Yes, I saw a Great Tit near the trail this morning.” Sure, you did. Sure. No sentence survives.

4/11

Dickcissel

Where to find it: Grasslands of the central United States
This small North American bird got its name from the sharp “dick-dick-ciss-ciss” sound in its call. Which is scientifically reasonable. And catastrophically unfortunate.

5/11

Shag

Where to find it: Coastal Europe, New Zealand, and parts of the southern hemisphere
In bird terminology, a shag is a perfectly respectable seabird related to cormorants. In modern English slang? Well… Anyway, birdwatchers in places like the United Kingdom routinely say things like “Look at those shags on the rocks,” completely unaware of the chaos they create around non-birders.

6/11

Horned Screamer

Where to find it: Wetlands of Brazil, Colombia, and surrounding regions
This sounds less like a bird and more like a banned heavy metal band. The horned screamer is a large, bizarre wetland bird with a spiky horn-like structure sticking out of its head and an alarm call that genuinely sounds unhinged. Not technically perverted — but deeply unsettling. It’s giving…a purgatory vibe.

7/11

Tufted Titmouse

Where to find it: Eastern United States
This poor bird never had a chance. “Titmouse” comes from old English words where “tit” meant small and “mouse” referred to a tiny creature. Linguistically innocent. Socially disastrous. Every time someone says “tufted titmouse,” half the room mentally becomes twelve years old again.

8/11

Satin Bowerbird

Where to find it: Australia
This one earns its place because male satin bowerbirds are among the most outrageously flirtatious creatures on Earth. Males build elaborate decorative structures called bowers and obsessively collect blue objects — berries, flowers, bottle caps, feathers, plastic — to impress females. It’s less bird behaviour and more interior design seduction.

9/11

Woodcock

Where to find it: Europe, Asia, and parts of North America
The Eurasian Woodcock is a real bird. A respected bird, even. But unfortunately, it sounds exactly like the kind of fake name teenage boys invent while trying not to laugh in biology class.

10/11

Bush Tit

Where to find it: Western United States and parts of Canada
Tiny bird. Catastrophic name combination. We love it. Birding forums discussing bush tits often read like accidental comedy scripts written by people who no longer notice what they’re saying. Bush tit, okay then.

11/11

Smew

Where to find it: Northern Europe and Asia during winters
The Smew itself isn’t perverted, but to be honest, doesn’t it sound suspiciously made-up? It sounds less like a bird and more like a word someone blurts out after being hit in the stomach. Ka-pow! Ka-boom! Smew! Sounds good to us. It is a real diving duck, and one that’s stunning to say the least. And yes, birdwatchers genuinely get excited when they spot one.

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Copyright © Jun 2, 2026, 06.03PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service