: 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
The hardness of the food and the strength of the beak also influence what a bird eats.—Randy McMullen, Mercury News, 22 Dec. 2025 Colossal is also making breakthroughs on its dodo bird and thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) projects, framing de-extinction not as spectacle, but as a tool for conservation, resilience and ethical reflection.—Moná Thomas, PEOPLE, 22 Dec. 2025
Verb
More than 900 acres of the park’s wetlands can be accessed through a locked gate, only for visitors going birding, kayaking, hiking, and more.—Amanda Ogle, Travel + Leisure, 15 Dec. 2025 Luckily, birding naturally fits into her routine while adding a little pizazz to her mornings.—Maddie Topliff, Better Homes & Gardens, 3 Dec. 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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