any of several large, soaring birds of prey belonging to the hawk family Accipitridae, noted for their size, strength, and powers of flight and vision: formerly widespread in North America, eagles are mostly confined to Alaska and a few isolated populations.Compare bald eagle, golden eagle.
a figure or representation of an eagle, much used as an emblem: the Roman eagle.
a standard, seal, or the like bearing such a figure.
one of a pair of silver insignia in the shape of eagles with outstretched wings worn by a colonel in the U.S. Army, Air Force, and Marine Corps and by a captain in the U.S. Navy.
(initial capital letter) a gold coin of the U.S., traded for investment, available in denominations of 5, 10, 25, and 50 dollars containing 1/10 to 1 troy ounce of gold, having on its reverse a picture of an eagle: first issued in 1986.
a former gold coin of the U.S., issued until 1933, equal to 10 dollars, showing an eagle on its reverse.
Golf. a score of two below par for any single hole.
(initial capital letter)Astronomy. the constellation Aquila.
Cards.
a representation in green of an eagle, used on playing cards to designate a suit in the pack additional to the four standard suits.
a card of a suit so designated.
eagles,the suit itself.
verb (used with object),ea·gled,ea·gling.
Golf. to make an eagle on (a hole).
Origin of eagle
1350–1400; Middle English egle<Anglo-French, Old French egle, aigle<Latin aquila, noun use of feminine of aquilus dark-colored
Once there, you can walk to a 20-mile-long beach to spot sea otters and eagles.
Our Favorite Hipcamp in Every State|Alison Van Houten|October 1, 2020|Outside Online
This is Major Tom Calling…with great news: The Eagle has landed.
Making 'The Dog': The Amazing True Story Behind ‘Dog Day Afternoon’|Allison Berg and Frank Keraudren|August 10, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Wall Street Journal: “Begley has a great many strengths—concision, eloquence, an eagle eye—and few of the usual shortcomings.”
The Best Biographies of 2014 (So Far)|Scott Porch|July 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Achievement always marked his path: Eagle Scout, then Marine Corps—Iraq and Afghanistan—then Georgetown Law.
War Nostalgia Is Leading Veterans to Places Like Syria. One Went Missing There.|Elliot Ackerman|May 3, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The gravity stands high and bright, like an eagle on a peak.
Are We in the Midst of a Kevin Costner Comeback?|Andrew Romano|January 28, 2014|DAILY BEAST
McKenna here proved to remain an Eagle Scout in the very best sense amidst the bloodiest and most harrowing fight in the war.
Why Was My Son Killed in Fallujah—and His Murderer Set Free?|Michael Daly|January 12, 2014|DAILY BEAST
So clement, so merciful, is that eagle who restrains his wrath.
The Induna's Wife|Bertram Mitford
The same God made the eagle, the vulture, the hawk, and their helpless prey.
The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 4 (of 12)|Robert G. Ingersoll
Ah, no; because it is not with an eagle as it is with a man.
Bird Stories|Edith M. Patch
Dickens appears to have visited the Eagle Tavern in 1835 or 1836.
Charles Dickens and Music|James T. Lightwood
But when Barret went on further to describe the meeting in the Eagle Pass, she went off into uncontrollable laughter.
The Eagle Cliff|R.M. Ballantyne
British Dictionary definitions for eagle
eagle
/ (ˈiːɡəl) /
noun
any of various birds of prey of the genera Aquila, Harpia, etc, having large broad wings and strong soaring flight: family Accipitridae (hawks, etc)See also golden eagle, harpy eagle, sea eagle Related adjective: aquiline
a representation of an eagle used as an emblem, etc, esp representing powerthe Roman eagle
a standard, seal, etc, bearing the figure of an eagle
golfa score of two strokes under par for a hole
a former US gold coin worth ten dollars: withdrawn from circulation in 1934
the shoulder insignia worn by a US full colonel or equivalent rank
verb
golfto score two strokes under par for a hole
Word Origin for eagle
C14: from Old French aigle, from Old Provençal aigla, from Latin aquila, perhaps from aquilus dark