jackdaw

listen to the pronunciation of jackdaw
English - Turkish
bir tür karga
(isim) küçük karga
i., zool. küçükkarga, cücekarga, Corvus monedula
bir tür küçük karga
Corvus monedula
karga

Birinin karatavuğu kargalardan ya da hatta küçük kargalardan ayırt etmesi için bir kuş bilimci olması gerekmiyor. - One does not need to be an ornithologist to be able to distinguish blackbirds from crows or even jackdaws.

Küçük kargalar benim büyük kuvars sfenksimi seviyorlar. - Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.

{i} küçük karga

Küçük kargalar benim büyük kuvars sfenksimi seviyorlar. - Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.

Birinin karatavuğu kargalardan ya da hatta küçük kargalardan ayırt etmesi için bir kuş bilimci olması gerekmiyor. - One does not need to be an ornithologist to be able to distinguish blackbirds from crows or even jackdaws.

English - English
A European bird of the Crow family (Corvus monedula), often nesting in church towers and ruins; a daw
{n} a kind of black chattering bird
A jackdaw is a large black and grey bird that is similar to a crow, and lives in Europe and Asia. a black bird like a crow that sometimes steals small, bright objects (Jack male name + daw (15-19 centuries) (perhaps from an unrecorded dawe)). or daw Crowlike black bird (Corvus monedula) with gray nape and pearly eyes. About 13 in. (33 cm) long, jackdaws breed in colonies in treeholes and on cliffs and tall buildings; their flocks fly in formation around the site. Their cry sounds like their name: "chak." The species ranges from the British Isles to central Asia. See also crow, grackle
See Daw, n
{i} black European bird belonging to the crow family
common black-and-gray Eurasian bird noted for thievery
A jackdaw
daw
A jackdaw
caddow
The jackdaw
kadder
jackdaw

    Hyphenation

    jack·daw

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ 'jak-"do ] (noun.) 1543. Compound of jack and daw The former element may refer either to its characteristic call, often represented as tchak-tchak, or to the name Jack. The latter portion means "jackdaw" in itself, from Old English dāƿe, and is cognate with Old High German tāha, which through Middle High German tāhele became modern German Dohle
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