mutton bird
See also: muttonbird
English
Alternative forms
- mutton-bird, muttonbird
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
mutton bird (plural mutton birds)
- (chiefly Australia, New Zealand) Any of various seabirds whose flesh is said to taste like mutton when cooked, especially Puffinus griseus, Puffinus tenuirostris, or a petrel of the genus Pterodroma.
- 1941, Ernestine Hill, My Love Must Wait, A&R Classics 2013, p. 186:
- He dubbed them mutton-birds, for they came like lambs to the slaughter.
- 1959, Monographiae Biologicae, Volume 8, page 422,
- Mutton Bird (Puffinus tenuirostris) Ornithosis
- Early in 1953 Dr. D. L. Serventy sent us twelve mutton birds from the Bass Strait Islands for another investigation. One of these birds died shortly after reaching Adelaide.
- 1983, Robert Drewe, The Bodysurfers, Penguin 2009, p. 17:
- The oil he sprayed on his customers was derived from the oil glands of mutton birds hunted in the islands of the Bass Strait by the descendants of nineteenth-century sailors and the Tasmanian Aboriginal women they had kidnapped.
- 2000, Donna Eden, David Feinstein, Brooks Garten, Caroline Myss, Energy Medicine, page 260,
- Thousands of small birds, Tasmania′s entire population of mutton birds, take flight at the crack of dawn, headed toward Antarctica.
- 1941, Ernestine Hill, My Love Must Wait, A&R Classics 2013, p. 186:
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