fowl
pronunciation
How to pronounce fowl in British English: UK [faʊl]
How to pronounce fowl in American English: US [faʊl]
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- Noun:
- a domesticated gallinaceous bird though to be descended from the red jungle fowl
- the flesh of a bird or fowl (wild or domestic) used as food
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- Verb:
- hunt fowl
- hunt fowl in the forest
Word Origin
- fowl
- fowl: [OE] Fowl was the main term for ‘bird’ in the Old English period, but in Middle English it was gradually replaced by bird. (It remains in use in compounds, such as wildfowl and waterfowl, and is sometimes still applied to ‘chickens’.) It goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *foglaz or *fuglaz, which also produced the still very much current German and Dutch vogel, Swedish fåagel, and Danish fugl, all signifying ‘bird’, and which may have been a derivative of the same source (*fleug-) as gave English fly – in which case fowl would mean literally ‘flying creature’.=> fly
- fowl (n.)
- Old English fugel "bird, feathered vertebrate," from Proto-Germanic *fuglaz, the general Germanic word for "bird" (cognates: Old Saxon fugal, Old Frisian fugel, Old Norse fugl, Middle Dutch voghel, Dutch vogel, German vogel, Gothic fugls "a fowl, a bird"), perhaps a dissimilated form meaning literally "flyer," from PIE *pleuk- (see fly (v.1)). Displaced in its original sense by bird (n.); narrower sense of "barnyard hen or rooster" (the main modern meaning) is first recorded 1570s; in U.S. this was extended to domestic ducks and geese.
- fowl (v.)
- Old English fuglian "to catch birds," from the source of fowl (n.). Related: Fowled; fowling. Fowling-piece "gun used for shooting wildfowl" is from 1590s.
Example
- 1. Welcome to markets in china , where everything from turtles to insects are sold alongside fowl and fish
- 2. This breed is supposed to have lived in the sultans castle gardens in what used to be called constantinople and was originally known as sultans fowl .
- 3. Working with feral fowl in sweden , the scientists found that many matings were forced , as the roosters are twice the size of the hens .
- 4. Handsome as the beasts ( and fowl ) may look , buyers are more concerned with their powers of reproduction .
- 5. Red is thought to calm the fowl - which is why farmers often use red lightbulbs in chicken coops .