bird









bird


bird [burd] ExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for bird on Thesaurus.com noun

  1. any warm-blooded vertebrate of the class Aves, having a body covered with feathers, forelimbs modified into wings, scaly legs, a beak, and no teeth, and bearing young in a hard-shelled egg.
  2. a fowl or game bird.
  3. Sports.
    1. clay pigeon.
    2. a shuttlecock.
  4. Slang. a person, especially one having some peculiarity: He’s a queer bird.
  5. Informal. an aircraft, spacecraft, or guided missile.
  6. Cookery. a thin piece of meat, poultry, or fish rolled around a stuffing and braised: veal birds.
  7. Southern U.S. (in hunting) a bobwhite.
  8. Chiefly British Slang. a girl or young woman.
  9. Archaic. the young of any fowl.
  10. the bird, Slang.
    1. disapproval, as of a performance, by hissing, booing, etc.: He got the bird when he came out on stage.
    2. scoffing or ridicule: He was trying to be serious, but we all gave him the bird.
    3. an obscene gesture of contempt made by raising the middle finger.

verb (used without object)

  1. to catch or shoot birds.
  2. to bird-watch.

Idioms

  1. a little bird, Informal. a secret source of information: A little bird told me that today is your birthday.
  2. bird in the hand, a thing possessed in fact as opposed to a thing about which one speculates: A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.Also bird in hand.
  3. birds of a feather, people with interests, opinions, or backgrounds in common: Birds of a feather flock together.
  4. eat like a bird, to eat sparingly: She couldn’t understand why she failed to lose weight when she was, as she said, eating like a bird.
  5. for the birds, Slang. useless or worthless; not to be taken seriously: Their opinions on art are for the birds. That pep rally is for the birds.
  6. kill two birds with one stone, to achieve two aims with a single effort: She killed two birds with one stone by shopping and visiting the museum on the same trip.
  7. the birds and the bees, basic information about sex and reproduction: It was time to talk to the boy about the birds and the bees.

Origin of bird before 900; Middle English byrd, bryd, Old English brid(d) young bird, chickRelated formsbird·less, adjective Birds, The noun

  1. a comedy (414 b.c.) by Aristophanes.

Related Words for birds fowl, game Examples from the Web for birds Contemporary Examples of birds

  • The sound of birds, quail, even doe, make a wild grid of noise.

    The Story Behind Lee Marvin’s Liberty Valance Smile

    Robert Ward

    January 3, 2015

  • The birds are debeaked, suffer ulcers, and terrible feet conditions.

    The History of the Chicken: How This Humble Bird Saved Humanity

    William O’Connor

    December 27, 2014

  • Birds eat their berries, which are coated in gluey material called viscin.

    Mistletoe is the Vampire of Plants

    Helen Thompson

    December 21, 2014

  • The birds poop all over the forest, and thanks to the viscin, the mistletoe seeds in said poop stick to branches.

    Mistletoe is the Vampire of Plants

    Helen Thompson

    December 21, 2014

  • On the weekends the birds and stray cats keep the artists company as they set up their displays.

    The Life and Hard Times Of The Family A Cuban Defector Left Behind

    Brin-Jonathan Butler

    December 19, 2014

  • Historical Examples of birds

  • Paralus ever lived in affectionate communion with the birds and the flowers.

    Philothea

    Lydia Maria Child

  • The birds feel it—and wonder at the tune that makes no noise.

    Philothea

    Lydia Maria Child

  • Among the delights of spring, how is it possible to forget the birds?

    Buds and Bird Voices (From “Mosses From An Old Manse”)

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

  • So the girl asked to walk by the river and hear the birds sing.

    The Trail Book

    Mary Austin

  • The morning air was sweet, and the birds were beginning to sing.

    In the Midst of Alarms

    Robert Barr

  • British Dictionary definitions for birds Bird noun

    1. nickname of (Charlie) Parker

    bird noun

    1. any warm-blooded egg-laying vertebrate of the class Aves, characterized by a body covering of feathers and forelimbs modified as wings. Birds vary in size between the ostrich and the humming birdRelated adjectives: avian, ornithic
    2. informal a person (usually preceded by a qualifying adjective, as in the phrases rare bird, odd bird, clever bird)
    3. slang, mainly British a girl or young woman, esp one’s girlfriend
    4. slang prison or a term in prison (esp in the phrase do bird; shortened from birdlime, rhyming slang for time)
    5. a bird in the hand something definite or certain
    6. the bird has flown informal the person in question has fled or escaped
    7. the birds and the bees euphemistic, or jocular sex and sexual reproduction
    8. birds of a feather people with the same characteristics, ideas, interests, etc
    9. get the bird informal
      1. to be fired or dismissed
      2. (esp of a public performer) to be hissed at, booed, or derided
    10. give someone the bird informal to tell someone rudely to depart; scoff at; hiss
    11. kill two birds with one stone to accomplish two things with one action
    12. like a bird without resistance or difficulty
    13. a little bird a (supposedly) unknown informanta little bird told me it was your birthday
    14. for the birds or strictly for the birds informal deserving of disdain or contempt; not important

    Derived Formsbirdlike, adjectiveWord Origin for bird Old English bridd, of unknown origin Word Origin and History for birds bird n.1

    Old English bird, rare collateral form of bridd, originally “young bird, nestling” (the usual Old English for “bird” being fugol), of uncertain origin with no cognates in any other Germanic language. The suggestion that it is related by umlaut to brood and breed is rejected by OED as “quite inadmissible.” Metathesis of -r- and -i- was complete 15c.

    Middle English, in which bird referred to various young animals and even human beings, may have preserved the original meaning of this word. Despite its early attestation, bridd is not necessarily the oldest form of bird. It is usually assumed that -ir- from -ri- arose by metathesis, but here, too, the Middle English form may go back to an ancient period. [Liberman]

    Figurative sense of “secret source of information” is from 1540s. Bird dog (n.) attested from 1832, a gun dog used in hunting game birds; hence the verb (1941) meaning “to follow closely.” Bird-watching attested from 1897. Bird’s-eye view is from 1762. For the birds recorded from 1944, supposedly in allusion to birds eating from droppings of horses and cattle.

    A byrde yn honde ys better than three yn the wode. [c.1530] bird n.2

    “maiden, young girl,” c.1300, confused with burd (q.v.), but felt by later writers as a figurative use of bird (n.1). Modern slang meaning “young woman” is from 1915, and probably arose independently of the older word.

    bird n.3

    “middle finger held up in a rude gesture,” slang derived from 1860s expression give the big bird “to hiss someone like a goose,” kept alive in vaudeville slang with sense of “to greet someone with boos, hisses, and catcalls” (1922), transferred 1960s to the “up yours” hand gesture (the rigid finger representing the hypothetical object to be inserted) on notion of defiance and contempt. Gesture itself seems to be much older (the human anatomy section of a 12c. Latin bestiary in Cambridge describes the middle finger as that “by means of which the pursuit of dishonour is indicated”).

    birds in Science bird [bûrd]

    1. Any of numerous warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrate animals of the class Aves. Birds have wings for forelimbs, a body covered with feathers, a hard bill covering the jaw, and a four-chambered heart.

    A Closer Look: It is generally believed that birds are descended from dinosaurs and probably evolved from them during the Jurassic Period. While most paleontologists believe that birds evolved from a small dinosaur called the theropod, which in turn evolved from the thecodont, a reptile from the Triassic Period, other paleontologists believe that birds and dinosaurs both evolved from the thecodont. There are some who even consider the bird to be an actual dinosaur. According to this view, the bird is an avian dinosaur, and the older dinosaur a nonavian dinosaur. Although there are variations of thought on the exact evolution of birds, the similarities between birds and dinosaurs are striking and undeniable. Small meat-eating dinosaurs and primitive birds share about twenty characteristics that neither group shares with any other kind of animal; these include tubular bones, the position of the pelvis, the shape of the shoulder blades, a wishbone-shaped collarbone, and the structure of the eggs. Dinosaurs had scales, and birds have modified scales-their feathers-and scaly feet. Some dinosaurs also may have had feathers; a recently discovered fossil of a small dinosaur indicates that it had a featherlike covering. In fact, some primitive fossil birds and small meat-eating dinosaurs are so similar that it is difficult to tell them apart based on their skeletons alone. birds in Culture birds

    A class of vertebrates distinguished by their feathers and their two legs and two wings. Birds are warm-blooded animals, and their young hatch from eggs.

    Note Some scientists argue that modern birds are descended from the dinosaurs. Idioms and Phrases with birds bird

    In addition to the idioms beginning with bird

  • bird has flown, the
  • bird in the hand
  • bird of passage
  • birds and the bees, the
  • birds of a feather (flock together)
  • also see:

  • catbird seat
  • early bird catches the worm
  • eat like a bird
  • for the birds
  • free as a bird
  • kill two birds with one stone
  • little bird told me
  • naked as a jaybird
  • rare bird
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