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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Jungle fowl

Jungle \Jun"gle\ (j[u^][ng]"g'l), n. [Hind. jangal desert, forest, jungle; Skr. ja[.n]gala desert.]

  1. A dense growth of brushwood, grasses, reeds, vines, etc.; an almost impenetrable thicket of trees, canes, and reedy vegetation, as in India, Africa, Australia, and Brazil.

    The jungles of India are of bamboos, canes, and other palms, very difficult to penetrate.
    --Balfour (Cyc. of India).

  2. Hence: (Fig.) A place of danger or ruthless competition for survival. /'bdIt's a jungle out there./'b8

  3. Anything which causes confusion or difficulty due to intricacy; as, a jungle of environmental regulations. --MW10. Jungle bear (Zo["o]l.), the aswail or sloth bear. Jungle cat (Zo["o]l.), the chaus. Jungle cock (Zo["o]l.), the male of a jungle fowl. Jungle fowl. (Zo["o]l.)

    1. Any wild species of the genus Gallus, of which several species inhabit India and the adjacent islands; as, the fork-tailed jungle fowl ( Gallus varius) of Java, Gallus Stanleyi of Ceylon, and Gallus Bankiva of India.

      Note: The latter, which resembles the domestic gamecock, is supposed to be one of the original species from which the domestic fowl was derived.

    2. An Australian grallatorial bird ( Megapodius tumulus) which is allied to the brush turkey, and, like the latter, lays its eggs in mounds of vegetable matter, where they are hatched by the heat produced by decomposition.

Wiktionary
jungle fowl

n. (alternative spelling of junglefowl English)

WordNet
jungle fowl

n. small Asiatic wild bird; believed to be ancestral to domestic fowl [syn: gallina]

Usage examples of "jungle fowl".

But Ki-Gor padded swiftly along with it as if it weighed no more than a jungle fowl.

He raised purebred Gallus Bankivas, the original wild jungle fowl from which all game fowl are descended, Javanese cocks, with tails ten feet long, miniature bantams from Japan--beautiful little creatures not much larger than quail--and many other exotic breeds.

He raised purebred Gallus Bankivas, the original wild jungle fowl from which all game fowl are descended, Javanese cocks, with tails ten feet long, miniature bantams from Japan—.

At the top he belched, giving himself a second taste of the fierily-spiced jungle fowl that had perished for the sake of his appetite that morning.

At least a dozen jungle fowl sprang up from the shattered pavement and flapped madly past our feet, leaving a small cloud of dust and feathers behind them.

Consider that what we call a chicken is in fact a domesticated Ceylonese jungle fowl.