fowl

[ UK /fˈa‍ʊl/ ]
[ US /ˈfaʊɫ/ ]
VERB
  1. hunt fowl
  2. hunt fowl in the forest
NOUN
  1. a domesticated gallinaceous bird thought to be descended from the red jungle fowl
  2. the flesh of a bird or fowl (wild or domestic) used as food
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How To Use fowl In A Sentence

  • ‘I am not afraid of neologism,’ wrote the fearless Professor Fowler.
  • In present-day usage, despite Fowler's strictures, concern for classical and linguistic purity is minimal and the coining of etymological hybrids is casual and massive.
  • God makes fowl and whales and every living creature.
  • He missed an early sitter then equalized with a goal set up by Fowler.
  • Personally, I begin waterfowl hunting, and me and my buddies put on a coyote hunt in January. With the big game season winding down in most areas. What is everyone doing to keep sharp and break the monotony of winter?
  • Most general breaches that in medal play invoke a two-stroke penalty, such as playing a wrong ball (as Mr. Fowler did in a foursomes match at the Ryder Cup), result in match play in loss of the hole. Can We Have More Match Play?
  • There is not much apparent resemblance between a barndoor Fowl and the Dog who protects the farm-yard. Essays
  • An old woman churns butter, while a woman in the foreground prepares a fowl for roasting.
  • The head woman had a tame khanga tole or tufted guinea-fowl, with bluish instead of white spots. The Last Journals of David Livingstone from 1865 to His Death
  • Welcome to the Wild, Wild West: The old Fowlers Pub, located at the top of Soi Skaw Beach (off Second Road), is being refurbished and will soon re-open as a Wild West-style theme boozer and noshery with hamburgers being a specialty.
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