turkey

pronunciation

How to pronounce turkey in British English: UK [ˈtɜːki]word uk audio image

How to pronounce turkey in American English: US [ˈtɜːrki] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    large gallinaceous bird with fan-shaped tail; widely domesticated for food
    a person who does something thoughtless or annoying
    flesh of large domesticated fowl usually roasted
    an event that fails badly or is totally ineffectual
    wild turkey of Central America and northern South America

Word Origin

turkey
turkey: [16] The term turkey was originally applied to the ‘guinea-fowl’, apparently because the bird was imported into Europe from Africa by the Portuguese through Turkish territory. When the American bird we now know as the turkey was introduced to the British in the mid 16th century, it seems to have reminded them of the guinea fowl, for they transferred the guinea fowl’s name turkey to it.
turkey (n.)
1540s, originally "guinea fowl" (Numida meleagris), a bird imported from Madagascar via Turkey, and called guinea fowl when brought by Portuguese traders from West Africa. The larger North American bird (Meleagris gallopavo) was domesticated by the Aztecs, introduced to Spain by conquistadors (1523) and thence to wider Europe. The word turkey first was applied to it in English 1550s because it was identified with or treated as a species of the guinea fowl, and/or because it got to the rest of Europe from Spain by way of North Africa, then under Ottoman (Turkish) rule. Indian corn was originally turkey corn or turkey wheat in English for the same reason. The Turkish name for it is hindi, literally "Indian," probably influenced by Middle French dinde (c. 1600, contracted from poulet d'inde, literally "chicken from India," Modern French dindon), based on the then-common misconception that the New World was eastern Asia. After the two birds were distinguished and the names differentiated, turkey was erroneously retained for the American bird, instead of the African. From the same imperfect knowledge and confusion Melagris, the ancient name of the African fowl, was unfortunately adopted by Linnæus as the generic name of the American bird. [OED] The New World bird itself reputedly reached England by 1524 at the earliest estimate, though a date in the 1530s seems more likely. The wild turkey, the North American form of the bird, was so called from 1610s. By 1575, turkey was becoming the usual main course at an English Christmas. Meaning "inferior show, failure," is 1927 in show business slang, probably from the bird's reputation for stupidity. Meaning "stupid, ineffectual person" is recorded from 1951. Turkey shoot "something easy" is World War II-era, in reference to marksmanship contests where turkeys were tied behind a log with their heads showing as targets. To talk turkey (1824) supposedly comes from an old tale of a Yankee attempting to swindle an Indian in dividing up a turkey and a buzzard as food.
Turkey
country name, late 14c., from Medieval Latin Turchia, from Turcus (see Turk) + -ia.

Example

1. Turkey castigated president bashar assad 's regime .
2. Turkey breeding is a troublesome but perspective business .
3. When he took office in 2003 mr erdogan set about reversing turkey 's decades-old policy of kurdish repression .
4. This recipe calls for turkey italian sausage , which is lower in saturated fat than pork sausage .
5. Turkey 's government is also edgy .

more: >How to Use "turkey" with Example Sentences