English edit

Etymology edit

From hawk +‎ -ling.

Noun edit

hawkling (plural hawklings)

  1. A small, young, or immature hawk.
    • 1851, Agnes Strickland, Elizabeth Strickland, Lives of the queens of England:
      The young nestlings of hawks; these hawklings being untrained, and good for little in falconry.
    • 1913, The Oriole - Volumes 1-4 - Page 18:
      The day's tragedies had begun; the east was warm with color, and streamers of light were woven through the clouds; but I thought that, somewhere near me, the mocker's' mate was sitting on her nest, and that somewhere, further away, there were young hawklings who, also, have a right to life.
    • 2009, Nancy Werlin, Locked Inside:
      It was a bird, a small hawkling. A baby. And as she watched, it began to stretch its wet, feeble wings.