Blossom-headed parakeet 
(Vẹt đầu hồng, Psittacula roseata)

The Blossom-headed parakeet (Psittacula roseata or Himalayapsitta roseata) is a parrot in the family Psittaculidae.
The bird is a resident breeder in Southeast Asia. The range expands from eastern Bangladesh, Bhutan, northeast India and Nepal, eastwards into Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, and also China. This is a non-migratory bird living in the same range.

Psittaciformes comes from the Ancient Greek word ψιττακός (psittakós) meaning "parrot" combined with the Latin suffix -formes (shape/form), essentially meaning "parrot-shaped" or "of the parrot form," referring to the bird order containing parrots, cockatoos, and macaws. 

The family name Psittaculidae comes from the Latin psittacus (parrot), which itself derives from the Ancient Greek word ψιττακός (psittakós), also meaning "parrot" with the suffix -ula indicating "little" or "diminutive," essentially meaning "little parrots" or "parakeets". It refers to Old World parrots like parakeets and lories. 

Psittacula is a Latinized term meaning "little parrot" or "parakeet," derived from the Latin psittacus (parrot), which itself comes from the Ancient Greek word psittakós (ψιττακός) for parrot, plus the diminutive suffix -ula. The name of the genus is a diminutive of the Latin word psittacus for a "parrot".

"Roseata" (or the adjective roseus) in Latin refers to something "rose-colored," "rosy," or "pink," derived from rosa (rose). It has roots in the Greek word rhodon (rose). The term is often used to describe a pinkish or blooming complexion.