Turkey

Turkey


Tur·key    Audio Help   (tûr'kē)   

A country of southwest Asia and southeast Europe between the Mediterranean and the Black seas. The region was dominated by many ancient civilizations and peoples, among them the Hittites (1800 B.C.), the Greeks (8th century B.C.), and the Persians (6th century B.C.), and in A.D. 395 it became part of the Byzantine Empire. The area was conquered by the Ottoman Turks between the 13th and 15th centuries and remained the core of the Ottoman Empire for more than 600 years. Its modern history dates to the rise of the Young Turks (after 1908) and the collapse of the empire in 1918. Under the leadership of Kemal Atatürk, a republic was proclaimed in 1923. Ankara is the capital and Istanbul the largest city. Population: 71,200,000.
tur·key    Audio Help   (tûr'kē)   
n.   pl. tur·keys
    1. A large North American bird (Meleagris gallopavo) that has brownish plumage and a bare wattled head and neck and is widely domesticated for food.

    2. A related bird (Agriocharis ocellata) of Mexico and Central America, brilliantly colored and having eyelike spots on its tail.

    3. A person considered inept or undesirable.

    4. A failure, especially a failed theatrical production or movie.

  1. Slang

    1. A person considered inept or undesirable.

    2. A failure, especially a failed theatrical production or movie.

  2. Sports Three consecutive strikes in bowling.


[After Turkey from a confusion with the guinea fowl, once believed to have originated in Turkish territory.]
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The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
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