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Game bird   /geɪm bərd/   Listen
adjective
Game  adj.  
1.
Having a resolute, unyielding spirit, like the gamecock; ready to fight to the last; plucky. "I was game...I felt that I could have fought even to the death."
2.
Of or pertaining to such animals as are hunted for game, or to the act or practice of hunting.
Game bag, a sportsman's bag for carrying small game captured; also, the whole quantity of game taken.
Game bird, any bird commonly shot for food, esp. grouse, partridges, quails, pheasants, wild turkeys, and the shore or wading birds, such as plovers, snipe, woodcock, curlew, and sandpipers. The term is sometimes arbitrarily restricted to birds hunted by sportsmen, with dogs and guns.
Game egg, an egg producing a gamecock.
Game laws, laws regulating the seasons and manner of taking game for food or for sport.
Game preserver, a land owner who regulates the killing of game on his estate with a view to its increase. (Eng.)
To be game.
(a)
To show a brave, unyielding spirit.
(b)
To be victor in a game. (Colloq.)
To die game, to maintain a bold, unyielding spirit to the last; to die fighting.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Game bird" Quotes from Famous Books



... its breeding habits, its travels, and its appearance it combines more peculiarities than perhaps any other bird, certainly than any other of the sportsman's birds, in these islands. It is not, legally speaking, a game bird and was not included in the Act of 1824, but a game licence is required for shooting it, and it enjoys since 1880 the protection accorded to other wild birds. This is excellent, so far as it goes, but it ought to be protected during ...
— Birds in the Calendar • Frederick G. Aflalo

... or crow-pheasant (Centropus sinensis) is a cuckoo that builds a nest and incubates its eggs. It is as big as a pheasant, and is known as the Griff's pheasant because new arrivals in India sometimes shoot it as a game bird. If naturalists could show that this cuckoo derived any benefit from its resemblance to a pheasant, I doubt not that they would hold it up as an example of protective mimicry. It is a black bird with rich chestnut wings. The black tail ...
— Birds of the Indian Hills • Douglas Dewar



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