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单词 bird
释义

bird

/bəːd /
noun
1A warm-blooded egg-laying vertebrate animal distinguished by the possession of feathers, wings, a beak, and typically by being able to fly.
  • Class Aves; birds probably evolved in the Jurassic period from small dinosaurs that may already have been warm-blooded.
I am currently using turkey feathers to fletch with, after spending half a day on a commercial turkey farm plucking wing feathers as the birds went into the slaughter house....
  • With a three-foot wingspan and two long, streaming tail feathers, these birds are easy to recognize.
  • Such cases of female competition and aggression have been noted in many birds and other vertebrates.

Synonyms

fowl;
songbird, warbler, passerine;
bird of prey, raptor;
chick, fledgling, nestling;
(birds) avifauna
informal feathered friend, birdie
1.1A bird that is hunted for sport or used for food: carve the bird and arrange on a warmed serving plate...
  • Moisten the top of the bird with olive oil and then season with thyme, rosemary, oregano, salt, pepper and a few pinches of cayenne.
  • Then they collected the eggs they didn't eat and stored them in casks, and they killed birds for both food and sport.
  • There were also clan-specific food taboos on particular birds and wild animals.
1.2 informal, chiefly North American An aircraft, spacecraft, or satellite.After testing in 2004, the Air Force would like to buy six more ABLs and modify the test bird into an operational aircraft....
  • The insurance on the plane was almost prohibitive and finding an airport and hangar for the bird was even more so.
  • We need better human intelligence and not just to rely on satellites and birds in the sky.
2 informal A person of a specified kind or character: she’s a sharp old bird...
  • To quote the old bird herself, we are not amused.
  • It seems there's still life left in the old bird after all.
  • If you flipped through the channels fast enough, it looked like the old bird had finally made up with Diana.
3British informal A young woman or a man’s girlfriend.The other point is that men want to feel that the women they go out with mirror them - and we all want to prove that we can pull a younger bird....
  • I had a friend who worked abroad minus his wife and ran off with a younger bird.
  • A fit bird means a girl who is pretty good looking or tasty!

Phrases

the bird has flown

a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush

the birds and the bees

birds of a feather flock together

do (one's) bird

flip someone the bird (or flip the bird)

(strictly) for the birds

get the bird

give someone the bird

have a bird

a little bird told me

Origin

Old English brid 'chick, fledgling', of unknown origin.

  • The origin of bird is unknown, and there are no parallel forms in any of the languages related to English. Old English brid (with the r before the i) meant only a chick or a nestling: an adult bird was a fowl. The form brid existed alongside bird in the literary language into the 15th century, but after that it survived only in dialect. Meanwhile fowl stopped being a general term, and it now refers only to specialized groups such as wildfowl and waterfowl. The first record of the proverb a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush comes in the mid 15th century. In birds of a feather flock together, first recorded a century later, the word ‘a’ means ‘one’ or ‘the same’.

    The British slang use of bird to mean a young woman is associated with the 1960s and 1970s, but goes back as far as the Middle Ages. In those days there was another word bird, also spelled burd, that meant a young woman, which people confused with the familiar bird. The Virgin Mary could be described in those days as ‘that blissful bird of grace’. The modern use, recorded from the beginning of the 20th century, appears to be something of a revival.

    The earliest version of the expression give someone the bird, meaning to boo or jeer at them, is the big bird, which was used by people working in the theatre in the early 19th century. The big bird referred to was a goose, a bird well known for its aggressive hissing when threatened or annoyed. The booing and hissing of the audience at an actor's poor performance might well have suggested a flock of angry geese.

    Bird meaning ‘a prison sentence’ is a shortening of birdlime (see also viscous) used in rhyming slang to mean ‘time’. So if you were ‘doing bird’ or ‘doing birdlime’, you were ‘doing time’, a sense known from the mid 19th century.

    In golf a birdie is a score of one stroke under par (see pair) at a hole. Two under par is an eagle, three under par is an albatross or double eagle, and one over par is a bogey (see bogus). This scoring terminology is said to have originated at the end of the 19th century when an American golfer hit a bird with his drive yet still managed to score one under par at the hole—this bird suggested birdie, and the other bird names were added to continue the theme.

Rhymes

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更新时间:2024/9/20 10:32:49