释义 |
crow
Crow 1 C0769500 (krō)n. pl. Crow or Crows 1. A member of a Native American people formerly inhabiting an area of the northern Great Plains between the Platte and Yellowstone Rivers, now located in southeast Montana. The Crow became nomadic buffalo hunters after migrating west from the Missouri River in North Dakota in the 18th century.2. The Siouan language of the Crow. [Translation of terms for the Crow people in many Native American languages, such as Lakota, Yanktonai, and Santee khąγí wičhasa, crow man : khąγí , crow + wičhasa, man.]
Crow 2 C0769500 (krō)n. See Corvus.
crow 1 C0769500 (krō)n.1. Any of several large glossy black birds of the genus Corvus, having a characteristic raucous call, especially C. brachyrhynchos of North America.2. A crowbar.Idiom: as the crow flies In a straight line. [Middle English croue, from Old English crāwe; see gerə- in Indo-European roots. Sense 2, from the resemblance of its forked end to a crow's foot or beak.]
crow 2 C0769500 (krō)intr.v. crowed, crow·ing, crows 1. To utter the shrill cry characteristic of a rooster.2. To exult over an accomplishment or piece of good fortune; boast. See Synonyms at boast1.3. To make a sound expressive of pleasure or well-being, characteristic of an infant.n.1. The shrill cry of a rooster.2. An inarticulate sound expressive of pleasure or delight. [Middle English crouen, from Old English crāwan; see gerə- in Indo-European roots.]crow (krəʊ) n1. (Animals) any large gregarious songbird of the genus Corvus, esp C. corone (the carrion crow) of Europe and Asia: family Corvidae. Other species are the raven, rook, and jackdaw and all have a heavy bill, glossy black plumage, and rounded wings. See also carrion crow2. (Animals) any of various other corvine birds, such as the jay, magpie, and nutcracker3. (Animals) any of various similar birds of other families4. offensive an old or ugly woman5. (Tools) short for crowbar6. as the crow flies as directly as possible7. eat crow informal US and Canadian to be forced to do something humiliating[Old English crāwa; related to Old Norse krāka, Old High German krāia, Dutch kraai]
crow (krəʊ) vb (intr) 1. (past tense crowed or crew) to utter a shrill squawking sound, as a cock2. (often foll by over) to boast one's superiority3. (esp of babies) to utter cries of pleasurenthe act or an instance of crowing[Old English crāwan; related to Old High German krāen, Dutch kraaien] ˈcrower n ˈcrowingly adv
Crow (krəʊ) npl Crows or Crow1. (Peoples) a member of a Native American people living in E Montana2. (Languages) the language of this people, belonging to the Siouan familycrow1 (kroʊ) n. 1. any of various large, stout-billed, usu. gregarious songbirds of the genus Corvus (family Corvidae), typically black or drab-colored, and nearly worldwide in distribution. 2. any of several other birds of the family Corvidae. 3. crowbar. Idioms: 1. as the crow flies, in a straight line; by the most direct route. 2. eat crow, to be forced to admit one's mistake; suffer humiliation. [before 900; Middle English crowe, Old English crāwe, crāwa, akin to Old Saxon krāia, Old High German chrāwa, chrāja] crow2 (kroʊ) v. crowed, for 1, (esp. Brit.), crew; crowed; crow•ing; v.i. 1. to utter the characteristic cry of a rooster. 2. to gloat or exult (often fol. by over). 3. to boast or brag. 4. to utter an inarticulate cry of pleasure. n. 5. the cry of a rooster. 6. an inarticulate cry of pleasure. [before 1000; Middle English; Old English crāwan; see crow1] crow′er, n. Crow (kroʊ) n., pl. Crows, (esp. collectively) Crow. 1. a member of a Plains Indian people of the Yellowstone River drainage basin in Montana and N Wyoming. 2. the Siouan language of the Crow. [1795–1805; translation of North American French (gens des) Corbeaux Raven (people), literal translation of Crow apsá·loke a Crow Indian] crow (krō) Any of various large birds having shiny black feathers and a raucous call. Crows are closely related to ravens and magpies.crow Past participle: crowed Gerund: crowing
Present |
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I crow | you crow | he/she/it crows | we crow | you crow | they crow |
Preterite |
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I crew/crowed | you crew/crowed | he/she/it crew/crowed | we crew/crowed | you crew/crowed | they crew/crowed |
Present Continuous |
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I am crowing | you are crowing | he/she/it is crowing | we are crowing | you are crowing | they are crowing |
Present Perfect |
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I have crowed | you have crowed | he/she/it has crowed | we have crowed | you have crowed | they have crowed |
Past Continuous |
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I was crowing | you were crowing | he/she/it was crowing | we were crowing | you were crowing | they were crowing |
Past Perfect |
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I had crowed | you had crowed | he/she/it had crowed | we had crowed | you had crowed | they had crowed |
Future |
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I will crow | you will crow | he/she/it will crow | we will crow | you will crow | they will crow |
Future Perfect |
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I will have crowed | you will have crowed | he/she/it will have crowed | we will have crowed | you will have crowed | they will have crowed |
Future Continuous |
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I will be crowing | you will be crowing | he/she/it will be crowing | we will be crowing | you will be crowing | they will be crowing |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been crowing | you have been crowing | he/she/it has been crowing | we have been crowing | you have been crowing | they have been crowing |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been crowing | you will have been crowing | he/she/it will have been crowing | we will have been crowing | you will have been crowing | they will have been crowing |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been crowing | you had been crowing | he/she/it had been crowing | we had been crowing | you had been crowing | they had been crowing |
Conditional |
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I would crow | you would crow | he/she/it would crow | we would crow | you would crow | they would crow |
Past Conditional |
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I would have crowed | you would have crowed | he/she/it would have crowed | we would have crowed | you would have crowed | they would have crew | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | crow - black birds having a raucous call corvine bird - birds of the crow familygenus Corvus, Corvus - type genus of the Corvidae: crows and ravensAmerican crow, Corvus brachyrhyncos - common crow of North America | | 2. | crow - the cry of a cock (or an imitation of it)cock-a-doodle-doo - an imitation of the crow of a cockcry - the characteristic utterance of an animal; "animal cries filled the night" | | 3. | Crow - a member of the Siouan people formerly living in eastern MontanaSiouan, Sioux - a member of a group of North American Indian peoples who spoke a Siouan language and who ranged from Lake Michigan to the Rocky Mountains | | 4. | Crow - a small quadrilateral constellation in the southern hemisphere near VirgoCorvus | | 5. | crow - an instance of boastful talk; "his brag is worse than his fight"; "whenever he won we were exposed to his gasconade"brag, bragging, crowing, gasconade, line-shooting, vaporingboast, boasting, jactitation, self-praise - speaking of yourself in superlatives | | 6. | Crow - a Siouan language spoken by the CrowSiouan language, Siouan - a family of North American Indian languages spoken by the Sioux | Verb | 1. | crow - dwell on with satisfaction gloat, triumphboast, brag, gasconade, shoot a line, vaunt, tout, gas, bluster, swash, blow - show offpreen, congratulate - pride or congratulate (oneself) for an achievement | | 2. | crow - express pleasure verbally; "She crowed with joy"let loose, let out, utter, emit - express audibly; utter sounds (not necessarily words); "She let out a big heavy sigh"; "He uttered strange sounds that nobody could understand" | | 3. | crow - utter shrill sounds; "The cocks crowed all morning"let loose, let out, utter, emit - express audibly; utter sounds (not necessarily words); "She let out a big heavy sigh"; "He uttered strange sounds that nobody could understand" |
crow1verb1. squawk, cry, screech The cock crows and the dawn chorus begins.2. gloat, triumph, boast, swagger, brag, glory in, vaunt, bluster, exult, blow your own trumpet Edwards is already crowing over his victory.
crow2 nounRelated words adjective corvine collective noun murdercrowverb1. To talk with excessive pride:boast, brag, gasconade, rodomontade, vaunt.Informal: blow.2. To feel or express an uplifting joy over a success or victory:exult, glory, jubilate, triumph.Translationscrow (krəu) noun1. the name given to a number of large birds, generally black. 烏鴉 鸦,乌鸦 2. the cry of a cock. 公雞啼叫聲 雄鸡的啼叫声 verb1. (past tense crew) to utter the cry of a cock. 公雞啼叫 雄鸡啼叫2. to utter a cry of delight etc. The baby crowed with happiness. 歡叫 (小孩)欢叫 ˌcrow's-ˈnest noun a shelter at the masthead of a ship, used as a lookout post. 船桅上的看台 桅上守望台crow
crow over (something)To brag or boast about something, likened to the squawking of a rooster. You know, no one likes it when you go around crowing over your successes in business.See also: crow, overcrow's feetWrinkles at the corner of the eyes, likened to the long forked toes on a crow's foot. Some people dread getting wrinkles, but I rather like my crow's feet—I think they give me a wise appearance.See also: feetbe up with the crowsTo be awake, out of bed, and active at a particularly early hour of the morning. Primarily heard in Australia. I don't know how he does it, but my husband is up with the crows every single morning. I won't have another pint, thanks. I have to be up with the crows tomorrow, so I'd better head home soon.See also: crow, upup with the crowsAwake, out of bed, and active at a particularly early hour of the morning. Primarily heard in Australia. I don't know how he does it, but my husband has gotten up with the crows every morning of his life. I won't have another pint, thanks. I have to be up with the crows tomorrow, so I'd better head home soon.See also: crow, upa crow to pluckAn issue to discuss—typically one that is a source of annoyance for the speaker. Hey, I have a crow to pluck with you! Why didn't you put gas in my car after you borrowed it?See also: crow, pluckas the crow fliesThe measurement of distance in a straight line. (From the notion that crows always fly in a straight line.) From here to the office, it's about 20 miles as the crow flies, but it's more like 30 miles by car since you have to wind around the mountain.See also: crow, fliescrow about (something)1. Literally, to squawk, as of a rooster. What is that rooster crowing about now? It's not even daylight yet!2. By extension, to brag or boast about something. You know, no one likes it when you go around crowing about your successes in business.See also: crowcrow baitSomeone or something that is near death, often an animal. That old horse can barely walk around the farm these days—he's just crow bait now.See also: bait, croweat crowTo admit that one is wrong, usually when doing so triggers great embarrassment or shame. Ugh, now that my idea has failed, I'll have to eat crow in the board meeting tomorrow. I think Ellen is a perfectionist because the thought of having to eat crow terrifies her.See also: crow, eatJim CrowThe systemic discrimination against African Americans that occurred in the southern United States from the end of the American Civil War until the 1960s, in which black people were treated as a lower class of citizens than white people. Back during Jim Crow, a black person couldn't even use the same drinking fountain as a white person! Many are calling this systemic racism the "new Jim Crow."See also: crow, Jimstone the crowsAn exclamation of surprise. Well, stone the crows! I never thought I'd see him walk through those doors again.See also: crow, stonestone the crows!An expression of shock or surprise at or about something. Primarily heard in UK. Well, stone the crows! I never thought I'd see you around these parts again! Stone the crows, the kids are actually playing together quietly for once!See also: stonemake (one) eat crowTo cause or force one to admit that one was wrong, especially regarding something about which one was overconfident or too self-assured. They laughed at the thought of our team every winning the championships, but we'll make them eat crow when we beat them for the title tomorrow! They made me eat crow when they showed me the sales numbers for the latest product.See also: crow, eat, make(as) hoarse as a crowSpeaking with a very raspy voice; very hoarse. Since I'm hoarse as a crow today, I'm not going to speak for much longer. I woke up hoarse as a crow after belting out my favorite songs all night long at the concert.See also: crow, hoarsecrow about something and crow over something 1. Lit. [for a rooster] to cry out or squawk about something. The rooster was crowing about something—you never know what. 2. Fig. [for someone] to brag about something. Stop crowing about your successes! She is crowing over her new car.See also: crowcrow baitRur. someone or an animal that is likely to die; a useless animal or person. That old dog used to hunt good, but now he's just crow bait.See also: bait, croweat crow 1. . Fig. to display total humility, especially when shown to be wrong. Well, it looks like I was wrong, and I'm going to have to eat crow. I'll be eating crow if I'm not shown to be right. 2. Fig. to be shamed; to admit that one was wrong. When it became clear that they had arrested the wrong person, the police had to eat crow. Mary talked to Joe as if he was an uneducated idiot, till she found out he was a college professor. That made her eat crow.See also: crow, eat*hoarse as a crowvery hoarse. (*Also: as ~.) After shouting at the team all afternoon, the coach was as hoarse as a crow. Jill: Has Bob got a cold? Jane: No, he's always hoarse as a crow.See also: crow, hoarsemake someone eat crowFig. to cause someone to retract a statement or admit an error. Because Mary was completely wrong, we made her eat crow. They won't make me eat crow. They can't prove I was wrong.See also: crow, eat, makeas the crow fliesIn a straight line, by the shortest route, as in It's only a mile as the crow flies, but about three miles by this mountain road. This idiom is based on the fact that crows, very intelligent birds, fly straight to the nearest food supply. [Late 1700s] See also: crow, fliescrow overExult loudly about, especially over someone's defeat. For example, In most sports it's considered bad manners to crow over your opponent. This term alludes to the cock's loud crow. [Late 1500s] See also: crow, overeat crowAlso, eat dirt or humble pie . Be forced to admit a humiliating mistake, as in When the reporter got the facts all wrong, his editor made him eat crow. The first term's origin has been lost, although a story relates that it involved a War of 1812 encounter in which a British officer made an American soldier eat part of a crow he had shot in British territory. Whether or not it is true, the fact remains that crow meat tastes terrible. The two variants originated in Britain. Dirt obviously tastes bad. And humble pie alludes to a pie made from umbles, a deer's undesirable innards (heart, liver, entrails). [Early 1800s] Also see eat one's words. See also: crow, eatas the crow flies If one place is a particular distance from another as the crow flies, the two places are that distance apart if you measure them in a straight line. I live at Mesa, Washington, about 10 miles as the crow flies from Hanford. This mountainous area has always been remote, although it is not far from Tehran as the crow flies. Note: People used to think that crows always travelled to their destination by the most direct route possible. `Make a beeline' is based on a similar idea. See also: crow, flieseat crow AMERICANIf someone eats crow, they admit that they have been wrong and apologize. He wanted to make his critics eat crow. I didn't want to eat crow the rest of my life if my theories were wrong. Note: The usual British expression is eat humble pie. See also: crow, eatas the crow flies used to refer to a shorter distance in a straight line across country rather than the distance as measured along a more circuitous road.See also: crow, flieseat crow be humiliated by your defeats or mistakes. North American informal In the USA ‘boiled crow’ has been a metaphor for something extremely disagreeable since the late 19th century.See also: crow, eatas the ˈcrow flies (informal) (of a distance) measured in a straight line: From here to the village it’s five miles as the crow flies, but it’s a lot further by road.See also: crow, fliesˌstone the ˈcrows, ˌstone ˈme (old-fashioned, British English) used to express surprise, shock, anger, etc: Stone the crows! You’re not going out dressed like that, are you?See also: crow, stoneeat crow tv. to display total humility, especially when shown to be wrong. Well, it looks like I was wrong, and I’m going to have to eat crow. See also: crow, eat as the crow flies In a straight line.See also: crow, flies eat crow To be forced to accept a humiliating defeat.See also: crow, eatas the crow fliesBy the most direct or shortest route. Since crows normally fly straight to their food supply, this simile came into use as the shortest distance between two points. It originated in the late eighteenth century or even earlier.See also: crow, flieseat crow/humble pie/dirt, toTo acknowledge an embarrassing error and humiliatingly abase oneself. All these expressions date from the early nineteenth century, eating crow from America and eating humble pie and dirt from Britain. The origin of the first is not known, although it is generally acknowledged that the meat of a crow tastes terrible. A story cited by Charles Funk and published in the Atlanta Constitution in 1888 claims that toward the end of the War of 1812, during a temporary truce, an American went hunting and by accident crossed behind the British lines, where he shot a crow. He was caught by an unarmed British officer who, by complimenting him on his fine shooting, persuaded him to hand over his gun. The officer then pointed the gun and said that as punishment for trespassing the American must take a bite out of the crow. The American obeyed, but when the officer returned his gun, he took his revenge and made the Briton eat the rest of the bird. The source of humble pie is less far-fetched; it is a corruption of (or pun on) umble-pie, “umbles” being dialect for the heart, liver, and entrails of the deer, which were fed to the hunt’s beaters and other servants while the lord and his guests ate the choice venison. This explanation appeared in 1830 in Vocabulary of East Anglia by Robert Forby. The analogy to eating dirt is self-evident. It appeared in Frederick W. Farrar’s Julian Home (1859): “He made up for the dirt they had been eating by the splendour of his entertainment.”See also: crow, eat, humble, piecrow
Crow, indigenous people of North America whose language belongs to the Siouan branch of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock (see Native American languagesNative American languages, languages of the native peoples of the Western Hemisphere and their descendants. A number of the Native American languages that were spoken at the time of the European arrival in the New World in the late 15th cent. ..... Click the link for more information. ) and who call themselves the Absaroka, or bird people. They ranged chiefly in the area of the Yellowstone River and its tributaries and were a hunting tribe typical of the Plains cultural area. Their only crop was tobacco, which they used for pleasure and religious purposes. Until the 18th cent. the Crow lived with the HidatsaHidatsa , Native North Americans, also known as the Minitari and the Gros Ventre. Their language belongs to the Siouan branch of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock (see Native American languages). ..... Click the link for more information. on the upper Missouri River; after a dispute they migrated westward until they reached the Rocky Mts. The Crow developed a highly complex social system. They were enemies of the Sioux and helped the whites in the Sioux wars. Today most Crow live in Montana, near the Little BighornLittle Bighorn, river, c.90 mi (145 km) long, rising in the Bighorn Mts., N Wyo., and flowing north to join the Bighorn River in S Mont. On June 25–26, 1876, Sioux and Cheyenne warriors defeated the forces of Col. George Custer in the Little Bighorn valley in Montana. ..... Click the link for more information. , where tourism, ranching, and mineral leases provide tribal income. In 1990 there were over 9,000 Crow in the United States. Bibliography See R. H. Lowie, The Crow Indians (1935, repr. 2004); P. Nabokov, Two Leggings: The Making of a Crow Warrior (1967); E. G. Denig, Five Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri (1975).
crow, partially migratory black bird, genus Corvus, of the same family as the raven, the magpie, the jay, and the rook and the jackdaw of Europe. The American, or common, crow, C. brachyrhynchos, about 19 in. (49 cm) long, has a wingspread of over 3 ft (92 cm). Crows eat some eggs and nestlings and grain, but destroy many harmful insects and rodents. In winter they gather at night by thousands in communal roosts. Their throaty "caw" is familiar, although they can also produce a musical warble. Crows, along with the other members of the family Corvidae, are considered to be the most intelligent of all birds. They are easily tamed and can learn to mimic some human sounds. The New Caledonian crow, C. moneduloides, is especially noted for its intelligence with respect to tools and toolmaking; it can use sticks, wire, string, and other objects as tools and can reshape them so that the object is better suited to a specific use. The Hawaiian crow, or alala, C. hawaiiensis, also can use tools; it is now extinct in the wild but is being bred in captivity. The fish crow, C. ossifragus, of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts is smaller than the common crow. The carrion crow, C. corone, of Eurasia is a flesh-eating bird 18 to 20 in. (46–51 cm) long. Crows are classified in the phylum ChordataChordata , phylum of animals having a notochord, or dorsal stiffening rod, as the chief internal skeletal support at some stage of their development. Most chordates are vertebrates (animals with backbones), but the phylum also includes some small marine invertebrate animals. ..... Click the link for more information. , subphylum Vertebrata, class Aves, order Passeriformes, family Corvidae.Crow; Raven (religion, spiritualism, and occult)Ravens are considered the most intelligent of birds, on par with the smartest nonavian animals on earth, including dolphins and primates. John K. Terres suggests that Corvidae, or corvids—crows, ravens, and magpies—possess "the highest degree of intelligence" of any birds. The raven, sacred to Apollo, was regarded as prophetic. In Norse mythology, Odin had two ravens, Hugin and Munin, who flew out each day and reported back to the god all that they had seen. Odin was called Hrafna-gud, or "God of the Raven." The crow features prominently in Native American mythology. Roger Williams wrote in 1643 of the reverence of the Algonquins for crows. In the Pacific Northwest, the Kwakiutl and Haida leadership clan is known as the Raven Clan, with Raven Priests. They speak of great leaders who were guided by crows and ravens. Among the Chipeweyan of eastern Canada, crow is a trickster, while the Navaho refer to missionaries as crows, because of their black robes. The Greeks and Romans believed that crows could predict the weather. Similarly, the raven was sometimes regarded by the Greeks as a "thunderbird" because of its ability to presage a storm. An old Irish saying, "to have raven's knowledge," means to have an oracular ability to see and know all things. In Wales it was common custom to doff one's hat at the sight of a crow. In England, ravens are still kept in official capacity at the Tower of London. It is said that as long as they remain, England will never fall to her enemies. Crows and ravens are believed to have very long life, and in his Metamorphoses Ovid speaks of the witch Medea injecting the veins of the elderly Jason with the blood of a crow that had outlived nine generations of men. In Tibet, the raven is the messenger of the supreme being. Crow a tribe of North American Indians belonging to the Siouan group. crow[krō] (vertebrate zoology) The common name for a number of predominantly black birds in the genus Corvus comprising the most advanced members of the family Corvidae.
Crow[krō] (astronomy) Corvus crowbar, crowA steel bar, one end of which is flattened; sometimes slightly bent; used for heavy prying, and as a lever for moving heavy objects.crowsymbolizes one who lives by his wits. [Western Folklore: Jobes, 388]See: Cunning
crowfaithful; does not mate again for nine generations. [Animal Symbolism: Mercatante, 161]See: Faithfulnesscrow1. any large gregarious songbird of the genus Corvus, esp C. corone (carrion crow) of Europe and Asia: family Corvidae. Other species are the raven, rook, and jackdaw and all have a heavy bill, glossy black plumage, and rounded wings 2. any of various other corvine birds, such as the jay, magpie, and nutcracker 3. any of various similar birds of other families Crow
Crow (krō), R.S., 20th-century British physician. See: Crow-Fukase syndrome. LegalSeeCrewCROW
Acronym | Definition |
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CROW➣Charcot Restraint Orthotic Walker (medical device) | CROW➣Center for Research on Women (University of Memphis; Tennessee) | CROW➣Countryside & Rights of Way Act 2000 (UK) | CROW➣Clinic for the Rehabilitation of Wildlife, Inc. (Sanibel Island, FL) | CROW➣Compact, Rugged, Operational, Wearable | CROW➣Consciousness Repairing Our World | CROW➣Combat Recruit of War (British army) | CROW➣Continuous Rod Warhead |
crow
Synonyms for crowverb squawkSynonymsverb gloatSynonyms- gloat
- triumph
- boast
- swagger
- brag
- glory in
- vaunt
- bluster
- exult
- blow your own trumpet
Synonyms for crowverb to talk with excessive prideSynonyms- boast
- brag
- gasconade
- rodomontade
- vaunt
- blow
verb to feel or express an uplifting joy over a success or victorySynonyms- exult
- glory
- jubilate
- triumph
Words related to crownoun black birds having a raucous callRelated Words- corvine bird
- genus Corvus
- Corvus
- American crow
- Corvus brachyrhyncos
noun the cry of a cock (or an imitation of it)Related Wordsnoun a member of the Siouan people formerly living in eastern MontanaRelated Wordsnoun a small quadrilateral constellation in the southern hemisphere near VirgoSynonymsnoun an instance of boastful talkSynonyms- brag
- bragging
- crowing
- gasconade
- line-shooting
- vaporing
Related Words- boast
- boasting
- jactitation
- self-praise
noun a Siouan language spoken by the CrowRelated Wordsverb dwell on with satisfactionSynonymsRelated Words- boast
- brag
- gasconade
- shoot a line
- vaunt
- tout
- gas
- bluster
- swash
- blow
- preen
- congratulate
verb express pleasure verballyRelated Words- let loose
- let out
- utter
- emit
verb utter shrill soundsRelated Words- let loose
- let out
- utter
- emit
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