Greater painted-snipe or goudsnip 
(Nhát hoa, Rostratula benghalensis)

The greater painted-snipe (Rostratula benghalensis) is a species of wader in the small painted-snipe family Rostratulidae.

The bird is widely distributed across Africa and southern Asia, and Southeast Asia.

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 Rostratulidae comes from Latin roots: "Rostratula" is a diminutive of rostrata (beaked), meaning "small-beaked," referring to their shorter bills compared to true snipes, with the "-idae" suffix indicating a bird family.