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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ivory gull

Ivory \I"vo*ry\ ([imac]"v[-o]*r[y^]), n.; pl. Ivories. [OE. ivori, F. ivoire, fr. L. eboreus made of ivory, fr. ebur, eboris, ivory, cf. Skr. ibha elephant. Cf. Eburnean.]

  1. The hard, white, opaque, fine-grained substance constituting the tusks of the elephant. It is a variety of dentine, characterized by the minuteness and close arrangement of the tubes, as also by their double flexure. It is used in manufacturing articles of ornament or utility.

    Note: Ivory is the name commercially given not only to the substance constituting the tusks of the elephant, but also to that of the tusks of the hippopotamus and walrus, the hornlike tusk of the narwhal, etc.

  2. The tusks themselves of the elephant, etc.

  3. Any carving executed in ivory.
    --Mollett.

  4. pl. Teeth; as, to show one's ivories. [Slang]

    Ivory black. See under Black, n.

    Ivory gull (Zo["o]l.), a white Arctic gull ( Larus eburneus).

    Ivory nut (Bot.), the nut of a species of palm, the Phytephas macroarpa, often as large as a hen's egg. When young the seed contains a fluid, which gradually hardness into a whitish, close-grained, albuminous substance, resembling the finest ivory in texture and color, whence it is called vegetable ivory. It is wrought into various articles, as buttons, chessmen, etc. The palm is found in New Grenada. A smaller kind is the fruit of the Phytephas microarpa. The nuts are known in commerce as Corosso nuts.

    Ivory palm (Bot.), the palm tree which produces ivory nuts.

    Ivory shell (Zo["o]l.), any species of Eburna, a genus of marine gastropod shells, having a smooth surface, usually white with red or brown spots.

    Vegetable ivory, the meat of the ivory nut. See Ivory nut (above).

WordNet
ivory gull

n. white arctic gull; migrates as far south as England and New Brunswick [syn: Pagophila eburnea]

Wikipedia
Ivory gull

The ivory gull (Pagophila eburnea) is a small gull, the only species in the genus Pagophila. It breeds in the high Arctic and has a circumpolar distribution through Greenland, northernmost North America, and Eurasia.