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Meaning of Canary | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C2 Standard
kəˈnɛəɹi

Definitions

  1. A small, usually yellow, finch (genus Serinus), a songbird native to the Canary Islands.
  2. Someone connected with Norwich City Football Club, as a fan, player, coach etc.
  3. Any of various small birds of different countries, most of which are largely yellow in colour.
  4. A female singer, soprano, a coloratura singer.
  5. An informer or snitch; a squealer.
  6. A light, slightly greenish, yellow colour.
  7. A (usually yellow) capsule of the short-acting barbiturate pentobarbital/pentobarbitone (nembutal).
  8. A yellow sticker applied by the police to a vehicle to indicate it is unroadworthy.
  9. Any test subject, especially an inadvertent or unwilling one. (From the mining practice of using canaries to detect dangerous gases.)
  10. 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.
  11. A change that is tested by being rolled out first to a subset of machines or users before rolling out to all.
  12. A light, sweet, white wine from the Canary Islands.
  13. A lively dance, possibly of Spanish origin (also called canaries).
  14. A sovereign (coin).
  15. 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

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.
See all C2 English words →

See also

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