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Bird — famous nurse
Answer for the clue "Bird — famous nurse ", 11 letters:
nightingale
Alternative clues for the word nightingale
Word definitions for nightingale in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
" Nightingale " is the 154th episode of Star Trek: Voyager , the eighth episode of the seventh season.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Old English næctigalæ , nihtegale , compound formed in Proto-Germanic (cognates: Dutch nachtegaal , German Nachtigall ) from *nakht- "night" (see night ) + *galon "to sing," related to Old English giellan "yell" (see yell (v.)). With parasitic -n- that ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. European songbird noted for its melodious nocturnal song [syn: Luscinia megarhynchos ] English nurse remembered for her work during the Crimean War (1820-1910) [syn: Florence Nightingale , the Lady with the Lamp ]
Usage examples of nightingale.
Nightingale that I apprehended you had sent him thither to inquire into the affair.
Accordingly your path was here beguiled with the warbling of a thousand birds, the full-toned blackbird, the mellow thrush, and the pensive nightingale.
Then followed various untimed periods, during which animal life rose by degrees from mollusk and jellyfish, by plesiosaurus and pterodactyl, horrible monsters, hundreds of feet in length, whose tramp crashed through the woods, or whose flight loaded the groaning air, to the dolphin and the whale in the sea, the horse and the lion on the land, and the eagle, the nightingale, and the bird of paradise in the air.
However, when their conversation on the principal point was over, Allworthy asked Nightingale, Whether he knew one George Seagrim, and upon what business he came to his house?
Even the innocuous nightingales were moralized, spiritualized, turned into citizens and anglicans -- and along with the nightingales, the whole of animate and inanimate Nature.
Shunkin gave the finest of her nightingales the name Tenko, or Drum of Heaven, and loved to listen to it from morning till night.
After several years she managed to train another splendid nightingale, which she also called Tenko and prized as highly.
Besides her lark, Shunkin had been keeping a nightingale which she called Tenko the Third.
When chiffchaff and willow-wren first come they remain in the treetops, but in the summer descend into the lower bushes, and, like the nightingales, come out upon the sward by the wayside.
Black people who had never been near the Keedsler mansion could imitate the Lyre Bird and the Willy Wagtail of Australia, the Golden Oriole of India, the Nightingale and the Chaffinch and the Wren and the Chiffchaff of England itself.
Hales, however, thinks that some particular vale is here alluded to, and argues, with much acumen, that the poet referred to the woodlands close by Athens to the north-west, through which the Cephissus flowed, and where stood the birthplace of Sophocles, who sings of his native Colonus as frequented by nightingales.
After my first night under the stars--wondrous night of wakefulness and hopeful music, throughout which I lay entranced at the foot of a wooded hill and was never for a moment uncompanioned by nightingale, cicala and firefly--I began to suffer from footsoreness, a bodily affliction against which romance, that certain salve for the maladies of the soul, is no remedy, or very little.
The whole garden of Gethsemane was just then pealing with the song of nightingales.
Nightingale had given orders for chairs to be sent for, a circumstance of distress occurred to Jones, which will appear very ridiculous to many of my readers.
They then separated, Nightingale, to visit his Nancy, and Jones in quest of the old gentleman.