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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Canaries

Canary \Ca*na"ry\, n.; pl. Canaries.

  1. Wine made in the Canary Islands; sack. ``A cup of canary.''
    --Shak.

  2. A canary bird.

  3. A pale yellow color, like that of a canary bird.

  4. A quick and lively dance. [Obs.]

    Make you dance canary With sprightly fire and motion.
    --Shak.

Wiktionary
canaries

n. (plural of canary English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: canary)

Wikipedia
Canaries

Canaries may refer to:

  • Canary Islands, an archipelago in the Atlantic belonging to Spain
  • Canaries Quarter, a village on the Caribbean island of Saint Lucia
  • "The Canaries", the nickname of two English football teams: Norwich City F.C. and Hitchin Town F.C., the Serbian FK Novi Sad, the French FC Nantes and the Bulgarian football club PFC Botev Plovdiv
  • Any number of wild birds, the Atlantic canary, or caged birds, the domestic canary
  • A lively 16th century court dance in Europe
  • Canaries, 1969 film by Jerome Hill

Usage examples of "canaries".

Parrots and canaries punctuated the avian wittering with squawked exclamation marks that made Isaac wince.

Helena, contains even now great volcanoes--as in Iceland, the Azores, the Canaries, etc.

I saw the dogs adoring Pietro, I saw the cats and the geese that lovingly followed and the canaries on his bell-chiming hat and him dancing on street corners through half of my life.

I refer, of course, to the dreadful affair of the canaries and the soot marks on the ceiling.

Here is a man from Cuba, who not only trains canaries in a singular manner but knows the call of tropical night birds and keeps a fireplace in his bedroom.

Immediately above a tiled Dutch stove there hung a cage containing three canaries which, momentarily ceasing their song, cocked their little golden heads at our approach.

Doubtless Wilson brought the brutes back with him," he went on, "and then conceived the idea of training certain of his canaries to imitate the song of some Cuban night bird upon which the Galeodes were accustomed to feed.

I refer, of course, to the dreadful affair of the canaries and the soot-marks on the ceiling.

Here is a man from Cuba, who not only trains canaries in a singular manner but knows the call of tropical night-birds and keeps a fireplace in his bedroom.

Doubtless Wilson brought the brutes back with him," he went on, "and then conceived the idea of training certain of his canaries to imitate the song of some Cuban night-bird upon which the Galeodes were accustomed to feed.

Of course there were no charts for the western ocean, for no one who had sailed beyond the Azores or the Canaries or the Cape Verde Islands ever returned.

He devoured the rumors of a dead sailor washed ashore in the Azores or Canaries or Cape Verdes, a waterlogged chart tucked into his clothing showing western islands reached before his ship sank, the stories of floating logs from unknown species of tree, of flocks of land birds far away to the south or west, of corpses of drowned men with rounder faces than any seen in Europe, dark and yet not as black of skin as Africans, either.

Then subtract another 9 degrees by starting his own voyage in the Canaries, the southwestern islands that seemed the likeliest jumpingoff point for the sort of voyage God had commanded, and now Columbus's fleet would only have to cross 68 degrees of ocean.

One-sixth of the Earth's circumference between the Canaries and Cipangu, and yet that still meant a voyage of more than 3,000 miles without a port of call.

If Alfragano's calculations were assumed to be in Roman miles, then the 60 degrees of distance between the Canaries and Cipangu would amount to as little as 2,000 nautical miles at the latitudes he would be sailing.