Grey-headed lapwing (Te vàng, Vanellus cinereus)
The grey-headed lapwing (Vanellus cinereus) is a lapwing species which breeds in northeast China and Japan.
The bird species winters in northern Southeast Asia from northeastern India to Cambodia.
Grey-headed lapwing (Te vàng, Vanellus cinereus) has a grey head and neck, darker grey breast band and white belly. The back is brown, the rump is white and the tail is black.
The term Charadriiformes comes from New Latin, combining the Greek word kharadrios ("a bird of river valleys" or "a bird of ravines") and the Latin suffix -formes meaning "forms" or "shaped like". Therefore, Charadriiformes translates to "birds shaped like or resembling the charadrius," which is a type of plover or stone curlew historically found in dry river beds or ravines.
The family name Charadriidae has the same origin as the order name from the Greek word kharadrios ("a bird of river valleys" or "a bird of ravines").
Vanellus is a Latin word meaning "little fan". The name refers to the sound of the wings in flight, which was compared to the sound of a winnowing fan. It is a diminutive of the Latin word vannus (“fan for winnowing grain”).
In Latin, cinereus means "ash-colored," "ash-gray," or "resembling ashes". It comes from the Latin word cinis, which means "ashes".











