Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"I knew my baby would come home," she chirps at one point.
"Never many on it at the start," chirps the conductor with understatement.
A recorded woman's voice chirps out cheerful status reports and warnings.
"We hope you enjoy your stay, and keep an eye out," the receptionist chirps brightly.
He tells the bird to chirp twice, but instead it chirps three times.
The bird will also get low to the ground, slightly spread her wings, and bounce as she chirps.
"That's what we're doing," she chirps back, "giving them choices in life."
I hear crickets, and a single bird chirps somewhere.
Promptly, the walk sign appears, and an electronic canary chirps them along.
A songbird chirps after the hurricane has passed through.
It is a popular myth that the cricket chirps by rubbing its legs together.
Television, meanwhile, chirps along with its own attenuated Bible spinoffs.
A bird chirps a welcome as you enter this world of sugar-coated nostalgia.
The distinctive sound of the cicada chirps through the heat of the day.
His cellphone chirps endlessly, the callers eager to make business propositions.
And then the communications array chirps again, and she realizes that it's only the phone.
The bird takes the grape and chirps twice.
"In some cultures, they only eat vomit," he chirps.
They come in black, blue and peach satin," she chirps).
"Aren't we cosmopolitan having a trained assassin stay overnight," she chirps.
"I position myself in front of the fence for any errant throws or hits, and the bird chirps at me," he said.
But then she sees the bag, somehow arrests her motion, chirps a "whoops!"
He chirps and curves his back while going on slow, showy "display flights" between trees.
"I have snow on my chin," she chirps, as publicists pick little soap chunks from her hair and face.
"Gary has been the greatest influence on my life," she chirps over the phone in her trademark Derbyshire accent.