: any of a class (Aves) of warm-blooded vertebrates distinguished by having the body more or less completely covered with feathers and the forelimbs modified as wings
Noun
A large bird flew overhead.
The birds were singing outside our window.
He's a tough old bird.
We met some smashing birds at the pub last night.
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Noun
Temperatures had plummeted, and the wildlife center quickly organized a response, using a kayak and net to capture the bird.—Madeline Bartos, CBS News, 9 Dec. 2025 Englewood is home to Cedar Point Environmental Park along Lemon Bay, where pine flatwoods cover most of the park, and Oyster Creek Regional Park, where a boardwalk snakes through tidal mangroves, allowing visitors to enjoy bird-watching.—Dobrina Zhekova, Travel + Leisure, 8 Dec. 2025
Verb
Attendees included people from birding groups, government agencies, architecture firms, research universities, and dark sky groups that want to minimize artificial light.—NPR, 17 Oct. 2025 Go birding at River Commons Arkansas Game and Fish Commission will host a morning of bird watching Wednesday at River Commons, a 100-acre tract administered by the Watershed Conservation Resource Center.—Arkansas Online, 14 Oct. 2025 See All Example Sentences for bird
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English brid, bird, from Old English bridd
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
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