thumb|A Eurasian siskin Spinus spinus giving 'siskin' calls thumb|A Eurasian siskin Spinus spinus The name siskin when referring to a bird is derived from an adaptation of the German dialect words sisschen, zeischen, which are diminutive forms of Middle High German (zîsec) and Middle Low German (ziseke, sisek) words, with cognates in Slavic languages, cf. Czech čížek; these names are of onomatopoeic origin. The name siskin was first recorded in written English in 1544 in William Turner's Avium praecipuarum, quarum apud Plinium et Aristotelem mentio est, brevis et succincta historia, referring
thumb|A Eurasian siskin Spinus spinus giving 'siskin' calls thumb|A Eurasian siskin Spinus spinus The name siskin when referring to a bird is derived from an adaptation of the German dialect words sisschen, zeischen, which are diminutive forms of Middle High German (zîsec) and Middle Low German (ziseke, sisek) words, with cognates in Slavic languages, cf. Czech čížek; these names are of onomatopoeic origin. The name siskin was first recorded in written English in 1544 in William Turner's Avium praecipuarum, quarum apud Plinium et Aristotelem mentio est, brevis et succincta historia, referring to the Eurasian siskin Spinus spinus.
Spinus Andean siskin Spinus spinescens Antillean siskin Spinus dominicensis Black siskin Spinus atratus Black-capped siskin Spinus atriceps Black-chinned siskin Spinus barbatus Black-headed siskin Spinus notatus Eurasian siskin Spinus spinus Hooded siskin Spinus magellanicus Olivaceous siskin Spinus olivaceus Pine siskin Spinus pinus Red siskin Spinus cucullatus Saffron siskin Spinus siemiradzkii Thick-billed siskin Spinus crassirostris Yellow-bellied siskin Spinus xanthogastrus Yellow-faced siskin Spinus yarrellii Yellow-rumped siskin Spinus uropygialis
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).