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stork
[stawrk]
noun
plural
storks ,plural
stork .any of several wading birds of the family Ciconiidae, having long legs and a long neck and bill.
the stork, this bird as the mythical or symbolic deliverer of a new baby.
My brother and his wife are expecting the stork in July.
stork
/ ɔː /
noun
any large wading bird of the family Ciconiidae, chiefly of warm regions of the Old World, having very long legs and a long stout pointed bill, and typically having a white-and-black plumage: order Ciconiiformes
(sometimes capital) a variety of domestic fancy pigeon resembling the fairy swallow
Other Word Forms
- storklike adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of stork1
Example Sentences
The closest relative of the New World vultures, Kendall said, is actually that emblem of motherhood, the stork.
In the People story, Steve Doocy, 68, joked that his son had actually been hit by “a stork” and that George had arrived shortly after his son shampooed out any bird goo.
The researchers in this study also found large footprints from a bird, likely from the giant marabou stork lineage, according to the study.
You know, Kevin, when I was growing up, a white stork was a symbol of someone bringing a baby to your front doorstep.
With long legs and large wings, the white stork is a prominent star of the pageant that is animal migration.
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