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plover
[ pluhv-er, ploh-ver ]
noun
- any of various shorebirds of the family Charadriidae. Compare dotterel ( def 1 ), killdeer, lapwing.
- any of various similar shorebirds, as the upland plover and other sandpipers.
plover
/ ˈʌə /
noun
- any shore bird of the family Charadriidae, typically having a round head, straight bill, and large pointed wings: order Charadriiformes
- any of similar and related birds, such as the Egyptian plover and the upland plover See crocodile bird
- green ploveranother name for lapwing
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of plover1
Example Sentences
The National Trust said it believed ongoing wildfires at Abergwesyn common in Powys had destroyed "the last remaining" local breeding habitat for golden plovers - considered one of the most beautiful birds of the British uplands.
Four UK shorebirds - the grey plover, dunlin, turnstone and curlew sandpiper - are becoming more endangered on the red list.
You’ll see egrets and herons in the tidal wetlands of the Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge and perhaps even snowy plovers nestling in the dunes or pecking for insects in the wet sand.
Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service, monitor the effect of the blasts on such animals as sea otters, bats, western snowy plovers, California least terns and California red-legged frogs.
Visitors to the beach are likely to spot elephant seals, black-tailed coastal deer and certainly the Western snowy plover, a small shorebird that was recognized as a threatened species in 1993 by the U.S.
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