English edit

Etymology edit

tern +‎ -ery

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

ternery (plural terneries)

  1. A colony of terns.
    • 1888, John Alexander Harvie-Brown, Thomas Edward Buckley, A Vertebrate Fauna of the Outer Hebrides[1], Edinburgh: David Douglas, page 140:
      Altogether Harvie-Brown has visited a great many Hebridean terneries, and paid special attention to their inhabitants.
    • 1991, John Hay, chapter 13, in The Bird of Light,[2], New York and London: Norton, page 117:
      The reason dead fish are so often found in a ternery is that these are the ones that have proved to be too much for the chicks to swallow.

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