Meaning of Canary | Babel Free
kəˈnɛəɹiDefinitions
- A small, usually yellow, finch (genus Serinus), a songbird native to the Canary Islands.
- Someone connected with Norwich City Football Club, as a fan, player, coach etc.
- Any of various small birds of different countries, most of which are largely yellow in colour.
- A female singer, soprano, a coloratura singer.
- An informer or snitch; a squealer.
- A light, slightly greenish, yellow colour.
- A (usually yellow) capsule of the short-acting barbiturate pentobarbital/pentobarbitone (nembutal).
- A yellow sticker applied by the police to a vehicle to indicate it is unroadworthy.
- Any test subject, especially an inadvertent or unwilling one. (From the mining practice of using canaries to detect dangerous gases.)
- A value placed in memory such that it will be the first data corrupted by a buffer overflow, allowing the program to identify and recover from it.
- A change that is tested by being rolled out first to a subset of machines or users before rolling out to all.
- A light, sweet, white wine from the Canary Islands.
- A lively dance, possibly of Spanish origin (also called canaries).
- A sovereign (coin).
- A previously-issued ticket, retained by a ticket-seller, conductor or driver and resold to a subsequent passenger as a means of defrauding the transport company.
Equivalents
العربية
الكناري
Čeština
kanár
Ελληνικά
καναρίνι
Français
jaune canari
Magyar
kanárisárga
Bahasa Indonesia
kenari
한국어
카나리아
Nederlands
kanariegeel
Polski
kanarkowy
Română
canar
Svenska
kanariefågel
Українська
канарка
Examples
“The tendency in these types of situations (as far as I can see) is that because I don't think the act itself is illegal, the police will go through your vehicle systematically loking^([sic]) for anything wrong with it, to slap a canary on it (that's slang for an unroadworthy sticker) or present you with some other fine.”
“Yes, if the exhaust is to noisey^([sic]) they can slap a yellow canary on it, but the[n] who cares you got rid of it.”
“You don't have to carry a spare wheel for a car to be roadworthy, and if you *do* carry one, it doesn't have to be in a roadworthy condition *unless* you fit it [to] the car and drive on it. / If it's not and you get pinched, expect a canary...”
“Ile to my honeſt knight ſir Iohn Falſtaffe, / And drinke Canary with him.”
“And though the annals of the period do not show us that there was less ale drawn, or less canary called for; men got dry with the heat of polemical discussion, and drunk with a text, not the fag end of a ballad, in their mouths; and people made a sort of morality of straight hair, long faces, and sad-coloured garments.”
“Or maybe you'd accept iv a couple o' bottles of claret or canaries?”
“In an other corner, Mistris Minx, a marchants wife, that will eate no cherries, forsooth, but when they are at twentie shillings a pound, that lookes as simperingly as if she were besmeard, and iets it as gingerly as if she were dancing the canaries, […]”
“[…] I haue ſeen a medicine / That's able to breath life into a ſtone, / Quicken a rocke, and make you dance Canari / With ſprightly fire and motion, […]”
“She had previously been sacked ... for "selling canaries" - a practice in which drivers resell used tickets to passengers and keep the fare for themselves.”
CEFR level
C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
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