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canary
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

canary

Bird (Serinus canaria) of the finch family Fringillidae, found wild in the Canary Islands and Madeira. In its wild state the plumage is green, sometimes streaked with brown. The wild canary builds its nest of moss, feathers, and hair in thick high shrubs or trees, and produces two to four broods in a season.

Canaries have been bred as cage birds in Europe since the 15th century, and many domestic varieties are yellow or orange as a result of artificial selection.

Some canaries were used in mines as detectors of traces of poison gas in the air.

canary

A dance in quick triple time with a dotted rhythm, possibly originating from the Canary Islands.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
RENEE ZELLWEGER (March 25, 2001): Zellweger ignited a mad rush for reconstructed vintage when she introduced a segment acknowledging the previously bestowed scientific and technical Oscars wearing a canary-yellow 1959 Jean Desses gown that took five fittings and 52 hours of restoration to hug her 110-pound frame.
which has a canary-yellow Sparrow in its window, available for a test drive.
Sense is made and unmade experimentally, one camera movement, outrageous jump cut, or scenic flourish at a time: What counts in Tokyo Drifter is the insipid flaneur's powder-bluejacket set in slim relief against the snow, a canary-yellow cabaret and the matching plumage of the canary who sings there, the loopy refrain of the title song.
 
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