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[ UK /bˈɜːdbɹe‍ɪn/ ]
[ US /ˈbɝdˌbɹeɪn/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person with confused ideas; incapable of serious thought

How To Use birdbrain In A Sentence

  • Australian Dance Theatre's new work, Birdbrain, will inject a modern, wry twist into the ever-enduring dance text of Swan Lake.
  • The only thing birdbrained about the article is that the auto manufacturers did not start using this technology in 2003.
  • Next time you're tempted to call someone a birdbrain, remember you might actually be giving them much more credit than you intend.
  • Shelby enjoyed acting like a birdbrain, but she was sharp as a tack, and Kenny tried to figure out what was going on. LADY BE GOOD
  • How dumb, or smart, are birds? Calling someone a birdbrain is usually meant as an insult. But many birds are quite clever. Take for example, the mockingbird.
  • Anyone who has watched crows, jays, ravens and other members of the corvid family will know they're anything but ‘birdbrained.’
  • Maybe that's an utter birdbrained statement, but there you are - it's mine. Archive 2005-10-01
  • The place was cluttered and cozy, filled with knickknacks and pets: a cageful of ornamental finches whose aimless twittering gave Joanna a whole new insight into the term "birdbrained"; Pella's two fat pugs about whom Joanna, a cat person, privately agreed with the Regent; and, to Joanna's great delight, a five-foot boa constrictor dozing in wintry torpor in a big glass cabinet built into the side of the chimney. The Silicon Mage
  • A birdbrained scheme pays off
  • She's not a "birdbrain," she said, but she is picking up the habit. Undefined
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