The home of a bird is called:: to make a bird's nest, bird's nest;
The home of a dog is called: to make a dog's kennel;
The home of a snake is called: to make a snake's hole; the idiom of "luring a snake out of its hole" can show that the home of a snake is called a hole; and the idiom of "luring a snake out of its hole" can show that the home of a snake is called a hole;? The idiom of "luring a snake out of its hole" can show that a snake's home is called a hole;? From: Liang Shiqiu's Deafness: "A snake charmer can lure a snake out of its hole by playing his flute, making it dance with its head held high."
Sheep's home is called: to be a sheep's pen;
Rabbit's home is called: to be a rabbit's grottoThe idiom of "Three Grottoes of the Cunning Rabbit" can show that the rabbit's home is called the rabbit's grotto; "Three Grottoes of the Cunning Rabbit" refers to the fact that the cunning rabbit will prepare several hiding dens, and it is used as a metaphor to describe that there are many hiding places or ways to conceal oneself; however, the idiom has a pejorative coloring in modern Chinese.
The home of a cow is called: to make a cow shed?
The home of a pig is called: a pigsty?
The home of a horse is called: to be a stable?
The home of a tiger is called: a tiger's den. "How do you get a tiger's son without entering the tiger's den" can show that the home of a tiger is called a tiger's den.
The home of a chicken is called: a chicken coop?
Bird's nest:
Birds start to build their nests after occupying a nesting area and choosing a mate. Most birds nesting by the female alone, there are male and female birds **** with the nest, such as house swallows and so on. The main role of the nest is to maintain the body temperature of the parent bird incubation. It is also conducive to the parent bird brood. Bird nest materials generally with the surrounding organisms and on. Such as fiber, animal hair, feathers, soil, lichen and so on. According to the location of the nest, can be divided into ground nests, water nests, construction nests and woven nests. Pheasants, geese, gulls, sandpipers and songbirds such as larks, larks and willow warblers build their nests on the ground soil, and some lay their eggs directly in depressions in the ground. Small partridge thrushes, red-boned tops, and dunnocks build floating nests on the surface of the water; these nests can rise and fall with the water, and water waves pose no danger to the young. Birds such as kingfishers and sand swallows make their nests by digging pit-like cavities at the base of rocky embankments or sandy cliffs. Woodpeckers, tits, dabbling ducks and mandarin ducks use natural tree cavities for nesting. However, woodpeckers must dig their own holes, while house swallows and others make their nests under buildings and eaves. Herons, doves and pigeons, etc. weave their nests in trees with twigs, which is very rudimentary. Burrows, orioles, curlews, lifebands, and great reed warblers can make cup nests. Short-winged tree warblers and wrens make ball nests, brown fan-tailed warblers and climbing sparrows make bottle nests, and slit-leaf warblers make pouch nests