1. Turn your throat and still sing. < /p>
2. Among bird enthusiasts, the so-called "throat transfer" refers to the transitional period during which starlings, mynas, parrots, etc. learn human language.
When starlings, mynas, parrots, etc. change their throats, the sounds they emit gradually change from thin to thick, from high pitch to bass, from smooth to stagnant, from round to thick, and from multi-syllabic birds. The process in which the vocalizations are transformed into monosyllables and disconnected sounds that sound jerky and unspeakable. The laryngeal transfer period is also a good period for teaching language. It should be fully utilized and more face-to-face teaching or tape-recorder teaching should be conducted.
This stage lasts about 2 months (that is, 3 to 4 months after the bird is born). The crown feathers begin to grow in the last month, indicating that the bird's growth is about to enter the youth stage. Language training is a very important enlightenment period, which will lay a good foundation for future training, so language teaching should be focused on at this stage.