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list of my favourite Sumerian dog proverbs
- Unruly(?), scowling dogs belong to the shameless man.
- While the ox is ploughing, the dog is spoiling the deep furrows.
- In the city where there are no dogs, the fox is boss.
- What will the dog do about what the fox is doing?
- What is eaten for today(?) was put there by the dog. What is eaten by the dog was put there for today(?).
- A sniffing dog entering all the houses.
- A dog eating unclean food is a dog which leaves nothing for the next(?) day.
- If one does not give the dog something, it will bark at every woman.
- The dog snarls at an ox scrubbed with soap.
A dog entered a tavern and said: "I can't see a thing. I'll open this one!"
- To a dog, a dream is a joy.
- Dog, you shouldn't (...) bones.
- The dog collects bones.
- The dog gnawing on a bone says to his anus: "This is going to hurt you!"
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The shoebill, (Balaeniceps rex) is a large African wading bird, a single species that constitutes the family Balaenicipitidae (order Balaenicipitiformes, Ciconiiformes, or Pelecaniformes). The species is named for its clog-shaped bill, which is an adaptation for catching and holding the large, slippery lungfish, its favourite food. This big bird also eats turtles, fish, and young crocodiles.
Shoebills stand about 115 cm (3.8 feet) tall. They are entirely gray, with broad wings and long legs. The head is large in proportion to the body, and the eyes are also exceptionally large. The shoebill claps the mandibles of its bill together as a display, producing a loud, hollow sound. Like herons and pelicans, shoebills fly with the head held back against the body. They nest on either floating vegetation or solid mounds and lay one to three white eggs, which hatch in about 30 days. Shoebills inhabit swampy regions in and around the White Nile area of northeastern Africa.
The taxonomic placement of the shoebill is a matter of some debate. It has traditionally been grouped with the herons, storks, and ibises (order Ciconiiformes) on the basis of behavioral and morphological studies. However, other morphological and genetic analyses suggest a closer affiliation with pelicans (family Pelecanidae) and with the hammerhead, another African waterbird whose taxonomic position is unclear. The composition of both the Ciconiiformes and the Pelecaniformes is, in any case, contested as well. Shoebills are sometimes placed in their own order, Balaenicipitiformes.