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Canaries

 - 5 dictionary results

ca⋅nar⋅y

[kuh-nair-ee] noun, plural -nar⋅ies, adjective
–noun
1. any of several Old World finches of the genus Serinus, esp. S. canaria (common canary), native to the Canary Islands and often kept as a pet, in the wild being greenish with brown streaks above and yellow below and in domesticated varieties usually bright yellow or pale yellow.
2. Also called canary yellow. a light, clear yellow color.
3. Slang. informer (def. 1).
4. Slang. a female singer, esp. with a dance band.
5. a sweet white wine of the Canary Islands, resembling sherry.
6. a yellow diamond.
–adjective
7. having the color canary.

Origin:
1585–95; < Sp (Isla) Canaria < L Canāria (insula) Dog (Island), equiv. to can(is) dog + -āria, fem. of -ārius -ary

Canary Islands

–plural noun
a group of mountainous islands in the Atlantic Ocean, near the NW coast of Africa, comprising two provinces of Spain. 1,138,801; 2894 sq. mi. (7495 sq. km).
Also called Ca⋅nar⋅ies.


Ca⋅nar⋅i⋅an, adjective, noun
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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ca·nar·y   (kə-nâr'ē)   
n.   pl. ca·nar·ies
  1. A small finch (Serinus canaria) native to the Canary Islands that is greenish to yellow and has long been bred as a cage bird.

  2. Slang

    1. A woman singer.

    2. An informer; a stool pigeon.

  3. A sweet white wine from the Canary Islands, similar to Madeira.

  4. A light to moderate or vivid yellow.


[French canari, from Spanish canario, of the Canary Islands, from (Islas) Canarias, Canary (Islands), from Late Latin Canāriae (Īnsulae), (islands) of dogs, from Latin canārius, pertaining to dogs, canine, from canis, dog; see kwon- in Indo-European roots.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Slang Dictionary
canary [kəˈnɛri]

  1. n.
    a female singer. : The band had a cute canary who could really sing.
  2. n.
    a capsule of Nembutal, a barbiturate. (Drugs. The capsule is yellow.) : There are a couple of blues, which ought to do the same as canaries.
  3. n.
    a police informer who sings to the police. (See also stool (pigeon).) : Spike is no canary. He would never squeal on us.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition.
Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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Word Origin & History

canary 
1584, of the wine; 1655, of the songbirds (short for Canary-bird, 1576), from Fr. canarie, from Sp. canario, from L. Insula Canaria "Canary Island," largest of the Fortunate Isles, lit. "island of dogs," (canis, gen. canarius) since large dogs lived there. Hence, the name of the little bird from the island. The name was extended to the whole island group (Canariæ Insulæ) by the time of Arnobius (c.300).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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