Meaning of Cormorant | Babel Free
ˈkɔːməɹəntDefinitions
- Any of various medium-large black seabirds of the family Phalacrocoracidae which dive into water for fish and other aquatic animals, found throughout the world except for islands in the centre of the Pacific Ocean; specifically, the great cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo).
- A voracious eater; also, a person who, or thing which, is aggressively greedy for wealth, etc.
Equivalents
Български
корморан
Català
corb marí
Čeština
kormorán
Deutsch
Kormoran
Español
cormorán
Suomi
merimetso
Français
cormoran
Gàidhlig
sgarbh
ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi
lawaiʻa
Հայերեն
ձկնկուլ
Bahasa Indonesia
pecuk
Íslenska
skarfur
Қазақша
суқұзғын
한국어
가마우지
Latina
truo
Latviešu
jūras krauklis
മലയാളം
നീർക്കാക്ക
Polski
kormoran
Română
cormoran
Русский
баклан
Shqip
karabullak
Svenska
storskarv
Kiswahili
Mnandi
Tagalog
kasili
Türkçe
karabatak
Українська
баклан
Wolof
coll
Examples
“Th' Eele-murthering Hearne, and greedy Cormorant, / That neare the Creekes in moriſh Marſhes haunt.”
“Thence up he [Satan] flew, and on the Tree of Life, / The middle Tree and higheſt there that grew, / Sat like a Cormorant; […]”
“The cormorant on high / VVheels from the deep, and ſcreams along the land.”
“I may mention, that I one day observed a cormorant playing with a fish which it had caught. Eight times successively the bird let its prey go, then dived after it, and although in deep water, brought it each time to the surface. […] I do not know of any other instance where dame Nature appears so wilfully cruel.”
“These pictures were in water colours. […] One gleam of light lifted into relief a half-submerged mast, on which sat a cormorant, dark and large, with wings flecked with foam; […]”
“The strong air would soon restore Jonathan; it has quite restored me. I have an appetite like a cormorant, am full of life, and sleep well.”
“A man was swimming out towards them, his flailing arms black and defined in the heat-hazy radiance as the wings of a cormorant that skimmed the water.”
“In lyke maner who will nat haue in extreme detestation the insatiable gloteny of Vitellius, Fabius Gurges, Apicius, and dyuers other, to whiche carmorantes, neither lande, water, ne ayre, mought be sufficient.”
“VVith eagre feeding foode doth choke the feeder, / Light vanitie inſatiate cormorant, / Conſuming meanes ſoone praies vpon it ſelfe: […]”
“Let Fame, that all hunt after in their lyues, / Liue regiſtred vpon our brazen Tombes, / And then grace vs, in the diſgrace of death: / VVhen ſpight of cormorant deuouring Time, / Th[']endeavour of this preſent breath may buy: / That honour vvhich ſhall bate his ſythes keene edge, / And make vs heires of all eternitie.”
“Should by the Cormorant belly be reſtrain'd, / VVho is the ſinke a th'body.”
“Surfetters, and Cormorants he compared to beasts voyd of reason.”
“VVhy, vvhat a Cormorant in Love am I! vvho not contented vvith the ſlavery of honourable Love in one place, and the pleaſure of enjoying ſome half a ſcore Miſtreſſes of my ovvn acquiring; muſt yet take Vainlove’s Buſineſs upon my hands, becauſe it lay too heavy upon his: […]”
“Law is a Bottomleſs-Pit, it is a Cormorant, a Harpy, that devours every thing; […]”
“His treaſur’d ſtores theſe Cormorants conſume, / VVhoſe bones, defrauded of a regal tomb / And common turf, lie naked on the plain, / Or doom’d to vvelter in the vvhelming main.”
“She had discovered, within a short time, that doctors were not the cormorants (often ignorant, but always insatiable) she had supposed them to be, and that certain causes produced certain effects;...”
CEFR level
B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
See also
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