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jackdaw

[ jak-daw ]

noun

  1. a glossy, black, European bird, Corvus monedula, of the crow family, that nests in towers, ruins, etc.


jackdaw

/ ˈdʒækˌdɔː /

noun

  1. a large common Eurasian passerine bird, Corvus monedula , in which the plumage is black and dark grey: noted for its thieving habits: family Corvidae (crows)
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of jackdaw1

First recorded in 1535–45; jack 1 + daw
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Word History and Origins

Origin of jackdaw1

C16: from jack 1+ daw
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Example Sentences

Thousands of jackdaws can suddenly take to the morning skies in winter, creating a whirling black cloud of creatures.

From BBC

Like many poets before him, he had a keen sense of how memory could repose in objects, whether “dungy sticks / In a jackdaw’s nest” or “a marble bust commanding the parterre.”

The Victorian dovecote in the eaves of the coach house may even remain home to the family of jackdaws now living there.

Mr. Weston cut grass on a tractor and helped to patrol the estate, evicting jackdaws that had nested in the main house’s chimneys and checking for fire safety and general security.

Her bedroom menagerie included an orphaned crow, a badger cub, a wounded jackdaw and a whole nest of baby bullfinches.

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