: a swift nearly cosmopolitan falcon (Falco peregrinus) often used in falconry
called alsoperegrine
Illustration of peregrine falcon
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The jersey features a 3D-club badge on the chest, the team’s stylized peregrine falcon icon patterned throughout the shirt, and an Idaho map at the right hip marks Boise’s location with a star garnet.—Idaho Statesman, 4 Dec. 2025 The owls did seem rattled, however, by some peregrine falcons that swooped down near them, something Clark was able to capture on his camera.—CBS News, 25 Nov. 2025 Roskilde’s stately cathedral stands solemn and proud—its royal tombs steeped in centuries of candlelit reverence—while chalk-white Møns Klint plunges into the deep Baltic blue, where fossil hunters comb the shore and peregrine falcons wheel overhead.—Lewis Nunn, Forbes.com, 14 Aug. 2025 Like the peregrine falcon, the cheetah, and the red ant, the mako is the quintessence of the species.—Pat Smith, Outdoor Life, 24 July 2025 See All Example Sentences for peregrine falcon
Word History
Etymology
Middle English faukon peregryn, from Medieval Latin falco peregrinus, literally, pilgrim falcon; from the young being captured wandering from their nests, which were too inaccessible to reach easily
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