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Audubon

[ aw-duh-bon, -buhn ]

noun

  1. John James, 1785–1851, U.S. naturalist who painted and wrote about the birds of North America.


Audubon

/ ˈɔːdəˌbɒn /

noun

  1. AudubonJohn James17851851MUSSCIENCE: naturalistARTS AND CRAFTS: artist John James. 1785–1851, US naturalist and artist, noted particularly for his paintings of birds in Birds of America (1827–38)


Audubon

/ ôdə-bŏn′ /

  1. American ornithologist and artist. His effort to catalog every species of bird in the United States resulted in the publication of The Birds of America (1827–1838), a collection of 1,065 life-size engravings of birds found in eastern North America. It is considered a classic work in ornithology and in American art.


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Example Sentences

After leaving the Nation, Malcolm X had ordered his security team not to carry guns and not to search people at the door to the Audubon so as not to deter people from attending his meetings.

Alexander said she worked in the environmental field for years before learning of Audubon’s past.

Started as the Audubon Society of the District of Columbia in 1897, it is the first of the 11 original Audubon societies to announce a name change, according to Caroline Brewer, the naturalist society’s spokeswoman.

Audubon is one of around 80 zoos across the US that have asked for experimental doses of the vaccine, says Mahesh Kumar, head of vaccine research for Zoetis, which manufactures the animal vaccine.

Even accounts of committee meetings—one with 1920s Audubon members, another with contemporary seminomadic Namibian herders—had my heart pounding, tickled to be so immersed in bureaucratic Ping-Pong.

“There used to be a lot more of us,” said Greenwood, who serves on the board of directors for the National Audubon Society.

For me, these two artists, Roger Tory Peterson and David Allen Sibley are our own John James Audubon of the 20th and 21st century.

And Audubon continued to paint birds as his business ventures faltered and failed.

Before Audubon, ornithologists depicted birds flatly and schematically.

Olivier is based loosely on Alexis de Tocqueville and Parrot has affinities with Audubon.

Audubon, the greatest of all American bird lovers, gives a graphic account of the migration of a flock of these birds.

The story of John James Audubon is as interesting as the most romantic novel.

Here Audubon lived, wrote, and painted until even his rugged strength was worn out.

Audubon saw a flock that contained “one billion one hundred and sixteen millions of birds!”

Audubon mentions having seen it in Maine at the end of October, but this specimen surely must have been an exceptional laggard.

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AudreyAudubon, John James