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Sandpiper   Listen
noun
Sandpiper  n.  
1.
(Zool.) Any one of numerous species of small limicoline game birds belonging to Tringa, Actodromas, Ereunetes, and various allied genera of the family Tringidae. Note: The most important North American species are the pectoral sandpiper (Tringa maculata), called also brownback, grass snipe, and jacksnipe; the red-backed, or black-breasted, sandpiper, or dunlin (Tringa alpina); the purple sandpiper (Tringa maritima: the red-breasted sandpiper, or knot (Tringa canutus); the semipalmated sandpiper (Ereunetes pusillus); the spotted sandpiper, or teeter-tail (Actitis macularia); the buff-breasted sandpiper (Tryngites subruficollis), and the Bartramian sandpiper, or upland plover. See under Upland. Among the European species are the dunlin, the knot, the ruff, the sanderling, and the common sandpiper (Actitis hypoleucus syn. Tringoides hypoleucus), called also fiddler, peeper, pleeps, weet-weet, and summer snipe. Some of the small plovers and tattlers are also called sandpipers.
2.
(Zool.) A small lamprey eel; the pride.
Curlew sandpiper. See under Curlew.
Stilt sandpiper. See under Stilt.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sandpiper" Quotes from Famous Books



... ash and the beeches are tinged with russet and gold, flocks of these handsome birds leave their homes in the ice-bound north, and fly southwards to England and the sunny shores of France. Such a rara avis as the grey phalarope—a wading bird like the sandpiper—occasionally finds its way to the Cotswolds. Wild geese, curlews, and wimbrels with sharp, snipe-like beaks, are shot occasionally by the farmers. A few woodcocks, snipe, and wildfowl also visit ...
— A Cotswold Village • J. Arthur Gibbs

... denominated songsters, but criers like the cuckoo, have been quite as great favorites with the poets, and have received as affectionate treatment at their hands, as have the song-birds. One readily recalls Emerson's "Titmouse," Trowbridge's "Pewee," Celia Thaxter's "Sandpiper," and others ...
— Birds and Poets • John Burroughs

... which they took in to oblige a friend of theirs, all about rare birds found in the neighbourhood, all the most outlandish names, aunt says, that she had never heard or thought of, and uncle had the impudence to say that it must have been a Purple Sandpiper, which, the paper said, had "a low shrill note, constantly repeated." And then he took down a book of Siberian Travels from the bookcase and showed her a page which told how a man was followed by a bird all day long ...
— The House of Souls • Arthur Machen



Words linked to "Sandpiper" :   greyback, shore bird, redshank, Calidris Ferruginea, Philomachus pugnax, Actitis hypoleucos, stint, upland sandpiper, sanderling, curlew sandpiper, knot, Tringa totanus, shorebird, spotted sandpiper, dunlin, pectoral sandpiper, Crocethia alba, greenshank, red-backed sandpiper, Bartramian sandpiper, Erolia minutilla, Calidris canutus, Tringa nebularia, ruff, Calidris melanotos, Actitis macularia, family Scolopacidae, limicoline bird, jacksnipe, tattler, Bartramia longicauda, yellowlegs



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