chat, any of several songbirds (suborder Passeri, order Passeriformes) named for their harsh, chattering notes.
These birds span several families, but most are classified with Old World flycatchers in the family Muscicapidae. Some authorities, however, include many species with the thrushes in the family Turdidae. In addition, many ornithologists place chats of the genus Granatellus, which were previously assigned to Parulidae, in the family Cardinalidae.
Australian chats are chiefly Epthianura species, usually placed in the family Epthianuridae. Nomadic inhabitants of scrubby open lands of the south, they feed on terrestrial insects. All are about 13 cm (5 inches) long. The white-faced, or white-fronted, chat (E. albifrons) is white and gray, with a black band from nape to breast (male); it is also called tang, from its metallic note.
The yellow-breasted chat (Icteria virens) of North America is, at 19 cm (7.5 inches), the largest member of the wood-warbler family Parulidae—if in fact it belongs there. Greenish-gray above and bright yellow below, with white “spectacles” (sexes alike), it skulks in thickets but may perch in the open to utter its mewing, churring, and whistling sounds.