: any of various swimming birds (family Anatidae, the duck family) in which the neck and legs are short, the feet typically webbed, the bill often broad and flat, and the sexes usually different from each other in plumage—often used figuratively in phrases like have one's ducks in a row, get one's ducks in a row, or put one's ducks in a row to describe being or becoming thoroughly prepared or organized
Her program's 10-week curriculum … uses a budget book to help first-timers get their financial ducks in a row.—Eileen Jenkins
I'm to prepare for a formal review in two weeks. Reserve a conference room. Get all my ducks in a row.—Chuck Palahniuk
The association was set to move forward last spring, then realized it didn't have its ducks in a row and essentially requested a Congressional bailout.—Pat Forde
I was sure I had all of my ducks in a row before the event finally arrived. Somehow, it didn't turn out as planned.—Jerry Carlson
… had prepared for a year, meeting with institutional investors and putting its ducks in a row for public scrutiny for months …—Alex Konrad
Noun (1)
her coworkers regard her as something of an odd duckVerb
The ceiling was so low I had to duck my head.
He ducked his head so they wouldn't see him.
We can't afford to duck the issue any longer.
They've been ducking each other for months.
She ducked into a store when it started to rain.
He ducked around a corner.
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Noun
For a classic Dallas meal, opt for the 16 oz Royal Ribeye from Sherman, and a side of duck fat tater tots.—Condé Nast, Condé Nast Traveler, 5 June 2026 About a month earlier, an unshaven Bonsack showed up tableside in a trucker cap to sauce my dry-aged Rohan duck, a $155 stunner of a special that sells out in the first 20-30 minutes every single night.—Amy Drew Thompson, The Orlando Sentinel, 5 June 2026
Verb
Now, 25 games and 577 days since the injury that put his career in jeopardy, there was All on the Bengals’ practice fields, cutting and accelerating, extending for receptions and ducking into blocking assignments.—Paul Dehner Jr, New York Times, 2 June 2026 Baker was hiding in the grassy area of a field and was seen ducking down as passing traffic approached, Hawaii Police Chief Reed Mahuna said in a press conference shown on Hawaii News Now and reviewed by PEOPLE.—Kc Baker, PEOPLE, 1 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for duck
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English duk, doke, from Old English dūce
Verb
Middle English douken; akin to Old High German tūhhan to dive, Old English dūce duck
Noun (3)
Dutch doek cloth; akin to Old High German tuoh cloth
First Known Use
Noun (1)
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
: any of various typically web-footed swimming birds with the neck and legs short, the body heavy, the bill often broad and flat, and the males and females usually differing in color
also: the flesh of a duck used as food
duck
2 of 4verb
1
: to thrust or plunge underwater
2
: to lower the head or body suddenly
3
: to move quickly : disappear suddenly
he ducked around the corner to escape detection
4
: to evade a duty, question, or responsibility : dodgeentry 2
ducked our question
duckernoun
duck
3 of 4noun
1
: a coarse usually cotton cloth
2
plural: clothes made of duck
duck
4 of 4noun
: an amphibious truck
Etymology
Noun
Old English dūce "duck"
Verb
Middle English douken "thrust under water"
Noun
from Dutch doek "cloth"
Noun
altered form of DUKW, military code name for this vehicle
: any of various swimming birds (family Anatidae, the duck family) in which the neck and legs are short, the feet typically webbed, the bill often broad and flat, and the sexes usually different from each other in plumage