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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
sandpiper
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A flock of sandpipers running at the edge of the waves lures me from the point.
▪ As we taxied to a halt on the coastal grassy runway, we disturbed parties of curlew, sandpipers and grey plover.
▪ Buoyant as a duck, slender as a sandpiper, small as a dunlin.
▪ For a while he stood on the soft sand, watching the waves break and the sandpipers scatter under them.
▪ In winter it is given over to turnstones, purple sandpiper, oystercatchers and other shellfish-eating birds.
▪ Lightly as sandpipers marking the shoreline boats at the jetty sprang and rocked upon the green water.
▪ Purple sandpipers arc the most self-effacing of birds.
▪ They were like sandpipers at the edge of the surf-they lived inches from the water and their feet Were never wet.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
sandpiper

Pride \Pride\, n. [Cf. AS. lamprede, LL. lampreda, E. lamprey.] (Zo["o]l.) A small European lamprey ( Petromyzon branchialis); -- called also prid, and sandpiper.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
sandpiper

1670s, from sand (n.) + piper.

Wiktionary
sandpiper

n. Any of various small wading birds of the family Scolopacidae.

WordNet
sandpiper

n. any of numerous usually small wading birds having a slender bill and piping call; closely related to the plovers

Wikipedia
Sandpiper

Sandpipers are a large family, Scolopacidae, of waders or shorebirds. They include many species called sandpipers, as well as those called by names such as curlew and snipe. The majority of these species eat small invertebrates picked out of the mud or soil. Different lengths of bills enable different species to feed in the same habitat, particularly on the coast, without direct competition for food.

Sandpipers have long bodies and legs, and narrow wings. Most species have a narrow bill, but otherwise the form and length are quite variable. They are small to medium-sized birds, measuring cm in length. The bills are sensitive, allowing the birds to feel the mud and sand as they probe for food. They generally have dull plumage, with cryptic brown, grey, or streaked patterns, although some display brighter colours during the breeding season.

Most species nest in open areas, and defend their territories with aerial displays. The nest itself is a simple scrape in the ground, in which the bird typically lays three or four eggs. The young of most species are precocial.

Sandpiper (disambiguation)

Sandpipers are a group of birds.

Sandpiper may also refer to:

  • The Sandpiper, a 1965 film
  • Sandpiper 565, a sailing sloop with four berth accommodation
  • Sandpiper CI, a company based in the (UK) Channel Islands
  • Sandpiper mine, a phosphate mine in Namibia
  • Sandpiper pipeline, an underground oil pipeline in the United States
  • The Sandpipers, a singing group of the 1960s and '70s
    • The Sandpipers (album), a 1967 album by this group

Usage examples of "sandpiper".

Most were still asleep, heads tucked into their back feathers, sanderlings, dunlins, sandpipers.

Cassie moved slowly along the beach, oblivious to the terns and gulls wheeling overhead and the sandpipers skittering ahead of her as they searched the tidelands for morsels of food.

At the farthest tip, near Cape Sable, the sky flashed with wild birds: herons, curlews, ibises, blue egrets, white pelicans, sandpipers and a few roseate spoonbills.

Beside it was a photo of a prim old clapboard on Sandpiper Lane, set between giant rock maples.

I went in and out of the Tides, the Sun 'N' Surf, the Breakwater, the Reef, the Lagoon, the Schooner, the Beachside, the Blue Sands, the White Sands, the Sandpiper, and the Casa Del Mar.

Now Simon would be part of the carbon cycle, food for bacteria and crabs and then sandpipers and gulls, thus slowly melting into the biomass under the dome.

With a nervous twitch of his avian head and a wary frown, the watcher broke eye contact and slipped into the chattering crowd, lost as quickly as a slender sandpiper skittering among a herd of plump seagulls.

Mounting to her eyes, her vexation seized wherever she turned them to be seized in turn by the unwavering leer of the Masai warrior on the magazine cover displayed, along with Town & Country and a National Geographic, on the coffee table, and she picked up the bird book for refuge in godwits and curlews, sandpipers, snipe, the repose they conjured as quickly gone with another turn of the page and she was up and through the kitchen, tapping on the white door Mister McCandless?

In some bird species, such as phalaropes and Spotted Sandpipers, it's the male that does the work of incubating the eggs and rearing the chicks, while the female goes in search of another male to inseminate her again and to rear her next clutch.

Now I looked around at the expanse of nipping, sharp sea, the gulls and sandpipers and husks of crabs and sand dollars, and then looked back to the twisted slats of dune fencing and willowy grasses taunting the wind, to the bird sanctuary.

The best known of these female sultans are the shore birds called jacanas (alias lily-trotters), Spotted Sandpipers, and Wilson's Phalaropes.

For example, in 1975 a single mink destroyed every nest in a population of Spotted Sandpipers that the ornithologist Lewis Oring was studying in Minnesota.

Although the numbers of adult males and females may be equal, the ratio of sexually available females to males rises as high as seven-to-one among breeding Spotted Sandpipers and Wilson's Phalaropes.

That's true, for instance, of most sandpipers of the high Arctic, where the very short breeding season leaves no time for a second clutch to be reared.

Only among a minority of species, such as the tropical jacanas and southerly populations of Spotted Sandpipers, is polyandry frequent or routine.