α. 1800s quauk, 1800s– quawk, 1900s– couac, 1900s– quock, 1900s– quok, 1900s– quowk.
β. 1800s quwark, 1800s– quark.
| 单词 | quawk | 
| 释义 | quawkn.α. 1800s quauk, 1800s– quawk, 1900s– couac, 1900s– quock, 1900s– quok, 1900s– quowk. β. 1800s quwark, 1800s– quark.  1.  Chiefly U.S. regional. The black-crowned night heron,  Nycticorax nycticorax, which has a deep, hoarse call. Cf. qua-bird n. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > freshwater birds > order Ciconiiformes (storks, etc.) > 			[noun]		 > family Ardeidae (herons and bitterns) > genus Nycticorax (night-heron) Nycticorax1688 shitepoke1775 Quaker1776 night heron1785 qua-bird1792 mudpoke1809 quawk1844 nankeen crane1872 squawk1872 1844    J. E. DeKay Zool. N.Y. II. 227  				The Black-crowned Night Heron, or Quawk,..derives its popular name from the deep gutteral cry. 1867    Amer. Naturalist 1 344  				Many..were all agog to cover themselves with glory by shooting a quawk. 1895    F. M. Chapman Handbk. Birds Eastern N. Amer. 136  				Black-crowned Night Heron; Quawk. 1926    A. C. Bent Life Hist. N. Amer. Marsh Birds 197  				The familiar night heron or ‘quawk’ is one of the best known and most widely distributed of our herons. 1961    F. G. Cassidy Jamaica Talk xiv. 298  				The night herons go by the name of quok. 1968    J. Hay Sandy Shore xii. 58  				There are little green herons and black-crowned night herons (locally called Quawks), but neither species is as common today as it once was.  2.  The harsh call of a night heron, duck, or other bird. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > freshwater birds > order Anseriformes (geese, etc.) > subfamily Merginae (duck) > 			[interjection]		 > quack quakea1529 quack1577 quack quack1698 quawk1863 the world > animals > birds > freshwater birds > order Ciconiiformes (storks, etc.) > 			[noun]		 > family Ardeidae (herons and bitterns) > genus Nycticorax (night-heron) > cry of quawk1863 1863    ‘G. Hamilton’ Gala-days 73  				For the heavy booming of cannon rose the ‘quauk!’ of ducks. a1864    J. Clare Later Poems 		(1984)	 I. 624  				The sooty crow Flew up and gave a quark. 1895    F. M. Chapman Handbk. Birds Eastern N. Amer. 137  				Occasionally they [sc. black-crowned night herons] utter a loud, hoarse quawk, the origin of their common name. 1962    R. S. Palmer Handbk. N. Amer. Birds I. 476  				The Black-crown's note can be expressed as quock. 1968    V. Nabokov King, Queen, Knave vii. 146  				From beyond the door came noise, laughter, the squeals of a helpless pig, the quawks of a tortured turkey. 1981    Gettysburg 		(Pa.)	 Times 27 Feb. 14/1  				Quawk is the sound made by a black-crowned night heron. 1991    M. Henry Panto Sphinx 48  				I wander through an Oxford park hear a moorhen's plainant note they say it is a crake or quark. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022). quawkv.α. 1800s– quawk, 1900s– quouk (U.S. regional (Midland)). β. 1800s– quark (English regional (midlands and northern)), 1800s– quork (U.S. regional).  Originally and chiefly regional.   intransitive. Of a bird or other creature, esp. a rook, crow, or domestic fowl: to utter a harsh call or quawk; to squawk. Cf. cawk vb. at cawk n.2 Derivatives. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > sound or bird defined by > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > cry or call > harshly creakc1325 crakec1386 yawpc1400 crunk1565 cawk1761 quawk1821 clang1832 clank1865 squark1871 1821    J. Clare Village Minstrel II. 121  				The rooks..Quawk clamorous to the spring's approach. 1858    J. R. Lowell Biglow Papers 1st Ser. 		(rev. ed.)	 in  Poet. Wks. 		(1866)	  ii. 126  				Ole gander flopped His wings a spell, an' quorked, an' dropped. 1883    Atlantic Monthly May 628/2  				Happy fowls..quawked and strutted to and fro. 1893    D. Jordan Forest Tithes 190  				The herons quarked harshly. 1910    P. MacKaye Garland to Sylvia  iii. 121  				These are a kind o' fowl called golden geese That quawk in the wood o' mornings. 1946    K. Tennant Lost Haven xiv. 229  				An' this old pelican went flying round scared at itself and quarking something frightful. 1999    Sun-Sentinel 		(Fort Lauderdale, Florida)	 		(Nexis)	 28 Mar. (Sunshine Mag.) 8  				I happened to find out that by blowing very gently on his beak, he [sc. a cockatoo] would quawk, quawk. Derivatives  ˈquawking  n. ΚΠ 1821    J. Clare Village Minstrel I. 24  				Rous'd by quawking of the flopping crows. 1860    J. F. Campbell Pop. Tales W. Highlands II. 145  				The gurgling and quarking of spring frogs in a pond. 1938    Daily Times-News 		(Burlington, N. Carolina)	 21 Jan. 4/3  				Donald Duck's quawking sounds like Rae Dooley in that baby carriage scene in the Follies. 1981    News 		(Frederick, Maryland)	 26 Feb.  c7/5  				The reason I entered was because I'm a pretty good duck caller. I guessed quawking couldn't be so much different. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < | 
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