English

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Etymology

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wild +‎ fowl

Pronunciation

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Noun

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wildfowl (plural wildfowls or wildfowl)

  1. Any wild bird such as ducks, geese or swans.
    • 1785, William Cowper, The Task: A Poem in Six Books[1], London: J. Johnson, Book 4, p. 168:
      [] Whoso seeks an audit here
      Propitious, pays his tribute, game or fish,
      Wildfowl or ven’son, and his errand speeds.
    • 1980, J. M. Coetzee, chapter 3, in Waiting for the Barbarians, London: Secker & Wartburg, page 81:
      In these early days of the journey we eat well. We have brought salted meat, flour, beans, dried fruit, and there are wildfowl to shoot.
  2. Waterfowl.

Translations

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Verb

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wildfowl (third-person singular simple present wildfowls, present participle wildfowling, simple past and past participle wildfowled)

  1. To hunt wildfowl.
    • 2005, Plato, translated by Lesley Brown, Sophist, page 220b:
      The hunting of the kind of winged creatures, taken as a whole, is called wildfowling.

Derived terms

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Translations

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