beak
beak — noun
1. the stiff, narrow front section that forms a bird's jaws and that it uses to pic
the stiff, narrow front section that forms a bird's jaws and that it uses to pick up food, build nests, or clean its feathers.
The parrot cracked the sunflower seed open with its strong yellow beak.
typical collocation: strong / yellow beak
Baby chicks tapped at the eggshell with their tiny beaks until it broke.
A heron stood by the pond, holding a small fish in its long beak.
The eagle's curved beak is sharp enough to tear meat from bones.
Sparrows clean their feathers by running them through their beaks.
用法筆記
Most often paired with adjectives describing shape, size, or colour (long, curved, sharp, yellow). The plural is regular: beaks.
常見錯誤
2. a humorous or rude word for a human nose that looks unusually big or sticks out
a humorous or rude word for a human nose that looks unusually big or sticks out sharply from the face.
Greta laughed and said her uncle had a beak you could spot from across the street.
informal register, often in jokes about appearance
The cartoon villain had a huge red beak and a thin black moustache.
The old portrait showed a stern man with a sharp beak and bushy grey eyebrows.
Farouk rubbed her cold beak with a tissue after walking through the snow.
用法筆記
Informal and can sound rude when used about a real person's face. Often appears in the fixed phrase 'stick / poke your beak in', meaning to interfere in someone else's business.
常見錯誤
3. in old-fashioned British slang, a person who has the power to punish you, usuall
in old-fashioned British slang, a person who has the power to punish you, usually a judge in court or the head teacher of a school.
The pickpocket was hauled before the beak the next morning.
fixed phrase: be brought / hauled before the beak
If the old beak catches us climbing the school gate, we'll be in trouble.
Charles Dickens often wrote about thieves who feared the beak in London courts.
Boys at the boarding school called their headmaster 'the beak' behind his back.
- magistrate
neutral term for a junior judge in lower courts
- headmaster
the standard word for the male head of a school
用法筆記
Now dated and chiefly British; mostly seen in older novels, period dramas, and historical references. Modern speakers say 'judge', 'magistrate', or 'headmaster' instead.