Citations:parrot
English citations of parrot
Noun: "a kind of bird"
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- 1525 — John Skelton, Speake, Parrot
- My name is Parrot, a byrd of paradyse […] Parrot is a goodly byrd, a prety popagey […]
- 1597 — William Shakespeare, 1 Henry IV ii 4
- That euer this Fellow should haue fewer words then a Parret, and yet the sonne of a Woman.
- 1598 — William Shakespeare, As You Like It iv 1
- I will bee more iealous of thee, then a Barbary cocke-pidgeon ouer his hen, more clamorous then a Parrat against raine.
- 1689 — John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, Book II, chapter 27 "Of Identity and Diversity"
- ſince I think I may be confident, that, whoever ſhould ſee a Creature of his own Shape and Make, tho it had no more Reaſon all its Life than a Cat or a Parrot, would call him ſtill a Man ; or whoever ſhould hear a cat or a parrot diſcourſe, reaſon, and philoſophize, would call or think it nothing but a Cat or a Parrot ; and ſay, the one was a dull irrational Man, and the other a very intelligent rational Parrot.
- 1694 — Thomas Urquhart and Pierre Antoine Motteux (tr.), The Fourth Book of Gargantua and Pantagruel by François Rabelais, ch LVII
- ...he even instructs brutes in arts which are against their nature, making poets of ravens, jackdaws, chattering jays, parrots, and starlings, and poetesses of magpies, teaching them to utter human language, speak, and sing
- 1749 — "The Prospect of the Island of Tobago", The Universal Magazine (June), page 266.
- So of the parraketoes, of which there are two ſorts ; one about the bigneſs of our Engliſh thruſh, but plumed like a parrot. But the ſmaller parraketo exceeds not a ſparrow in bigneſs, and, like the green parrot, may be taught to talk.
- 1789 — Samuel Johnson, The Rambler, 11th edition, volume II, page 117, (originally published serially 1750-1752)
- She quarrelled with one family, becauſe ſhe had an unpleaſant view from their windows; with another, becauſe the ſquirrel leaped within two yards of her; and with a third, becauſe ſhe could not bear the noiſe of the parrot.
- 1855 December – 1857 June, Charles Dickens, “Mrs. Merdle’s Complaint”, in Little Dorrit, London: Bradbury and Evans, […], published 1857, →OCLC, book the first (Poverty), page 290:
- Mrs. Merdle was at home, and was in her nest of crimson and gold, with the parrot on a neighbouring stem watching her with his head on one side, as if he took her for another splendid parrot of a larger species.
- 1889 — Charles Norton Elvin, A Dictionary of Heraldry, p 97
- The parrot when blazoned proper, is green, beaked and membered gules.
- 1917 — T. S. Eliot, Aunt Helen
- The dogs were handsomely provided for,
But shortly afterwards the parrot died too.
- The dogs were handsomely provided for,
- 1919 — Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzan the Untamed, ch XIX
- As the girl neared these latter images she saw that the capital of each column was hewn into the semblance of a human skull upon which the parrots perched.
- 1964 — G. K. Chesterton, The Spice of Life and Other Essays, "The Soul in Every Legend"
- I do not deny that the poet may write an ode to a parrot as well as to a skylark; or for that matter a serenade to a penguin or a pelican. But he will prefer the parrot outside the parrothouse. He will prefer the pelican in the wilderness.
- 2008 — Irene M. Pepperberg, Alex & Me, chapter 2, page 55
- Egyptian hieroglyphics show images of pet parrots, and noble Greek and Roman families kept Greys, too.
Noun: "a person who repeats what is said"
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- 1700 — Thomas Brown, "Amusements Serious And Comical", "Westminster-Abbey"; republished in The Works of Mr. Thomas Brown (1760), volume III, part ii, page 128
- To which we now ventur'd to enter, being firſt encountered by a dapper pert ſcoundrel in a crop-ear'd wig, the parrot of the place, but a piece of a Weſtminſter wit; for he throws in his jokes as formally, and as much to the purpoſe as a fanatick holder-forth does his text.
- 1769 — John Courtenay, Robert Jephson, The Batchelor: Or, Speculations of Jeoffry Wagstaffe, Esq, page 89
- nay, whether it might not be unſaſe to affront the lap-dog or parrot of a member of parliament.
- 1789 — John Hoole, "To the Memory of Mrs. Margaret Woffington", published in Bell's Classical Arrangement of Fugitive Poetry, volume IX, page 135
- Thy judgment saw, thy taste each beauty caught,
No senseless parrot of the poet's thought!
- Thy judgment saw, thy taste each beauty caught,
- 1814 — "Review of A Series of Popular Essays, The Monthly Review LXXIV (May-Aug), page 403
- Nearly all the complaints of dullness and inattention, that we have had the opportunity of investigating, had originated in flie attempt of the teacher to make a parrot of the pupil, and to compel the repetition of words not understood, as if they were understood.
- 1837 — Ralph Waldo Emerson, The American Scholar
- In this distribution of functions, the scholar is the delegated intellect. In the right state, he is, Man Thinking. In the degenerate state, when the victim of society, he tends to become a mere thinker, or, still worse, the parrot of other men's thinking.
- 1872 — William Bodham Donne, Euripides, chapter III, page 53
- He who could recite the whole Iliad or Odyssey was now looked upon, when compared with an acute rhetorician, as little better than a busy idler—all very well, perhaps, for enlivening the guests at a formal supper, or entertaining a loitering group in the streets. Even fools have sometimes portentous memories, but no fool could handle adroitly the weapons of a sound logician. Man was born to be something better than a parrot; he was meant to cultivate and to use "discourse of reason." To argue logically upon almost any premises,—to have words at command, to be ready in reply, fertile in objection, averse from granting propositions, to possess much general knowledge, were accomplishments which no well-educated young Athenian, aspiring to make a figure in public, could do without.
- 1943 — Vivian Connell, The Nineteenth Hole of Europe: A Play in Three Acts, page 95
- To-day is the parrot of Yesterday, and To-morrow the parrot of To-day. Man does not change.
- 1985 — Stephen Marley, Managra, p 150
- Did you work out the principles of transdimensional physics yourself, or were you simply told? There was more in your speech of the parrot than the authentic natural philosopher.
- 1999 — Deborah E. McDowell, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, Introduction, page xv
- Even though what he read and wrote was inevitably stamped by his white audience and sponsors, he was far from being an unwitting parrot of his sources or an exile from African-American cultural forms.
- 2008 — Catherine Rottenberg, Performing Americanness: Race, Class, and Gender in Modern African-American and Jewish-American Literature, chapter 6, page 108
- A Parrot of Words and Monkey of Manners [chapter title]
Noun: "(archaic) a puffin"
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- 1896 — Elliott Coues, Key to North American Birds, page 800
- With one exception (that of the Common Puffin or Sea Parrot of the Atlantic) all are confined to North Pacific and Polar waters.
- 1907 — Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, Major Vigoureaux, page 147
- There the sea-parrots breed, and so thickly that you can scarcely set foot ashore without plunging into their houses; but there is a mound near the western end where no sea-parrot may come, for the herring-gulls and the black-backs claim it for their own.
Noun: "a kind of coal"
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- 1810 — John Williams, The Natural History of the Mineral Kingdom, 2nd edition, page 162
- There is a thick stratum of coal among the edge-sems of Gilmerton, Loanhead, &c. in Midlothian, called the Great Seam, which contains coals of several different qualities and varieties, such as splent coal, roch coal, run splent coal, a stratum of fine parrot or cannel coal, of excellent quality, and a stratum of coarse parrot of inferior quality ; and there are in the same great seam varieties of the roch coals and of the run splents : so that this individual stratum contains a considerable nummber and variety of coal of different appearance, quality, and texture.
Verb (trans.): "to repeat what is said"
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- 1759 — Thomas Wilkes, A General View of the Stage, page 277
- Some tones of his voice, which is not ſtrong, remind us of that of Mr. Garrick, which it reſembles; from whence ſome people have maliciouſly affirmed, that he is parrotted in every thing.
- 1790 — Tate Wilkinson, Memoirs of His Own Life, page 181
- The Orphan of China, being a tragedy not being any way difficult or myſterious to thoſe who do not require to be parroted in their parts, we can aſſure the public that it is now in perfect readineſs, and will be performed this evening at the theatre in Smock-alley.
- 1818 — anonymous "Table Talk", "On the Ignorance of the Learned", The Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany (July), page 57
- The learned pedant is conversant with books only as they are made of other books, and those again of others, without end. He parrots those who have parrotted others. He can translate the same word into ten different languages, but he knows nothing of the thing which it means in any one of them.
- 1828 — "Reports on the Select Committee on Emigration from the United Kingdom" The Quarterly Review XXXVII (Jan/Mar), page 570
- This system will construct a machine but it will not form a man. Of what does it consist? Of prayers parroted without one sentiment in accord with the words uttered; of moral lectures, which the understanding does not comprehend, or the heart feel...
- 1877 — anonymous, "M. Thiers: A Sketch from Life", Macmillan's Magazine (Nov), page 3
- If asked to give an account of what passes in the moon, he would be at no loss to furnish one. He parrots every scientific theory and system, and really he looks like a parrot raised in some incomprehensible way into a human being.
- 1959 — Robert A. Heinlein, Starship Troopers, ch XII
- I caught an answer right out of the book and parroted it.
- 1965 — Hugh M. Cole, The Ardennes: Battle of the Bulge, ch IV
- Three of the four prisoners seemed to be parroting wild and baseless rumors of a sort which was fairly common, and these three were bundled into prisoner of war cages without further ado.
- 1992 — Deborah Tannen, That's Not what I Meant!: How Conversational Style Makes Or Breaks Relationships, chapter 4, page 67
- What good is it if you order someone to say "I love you," and he parrots it?
- 1996 — Bill Clinton, Presidential Radio Address (15 June)
- So when political leaders parrot the tobacco company line, say cigarettes are not necessarily addictive, and oppose our efforts to keep tobacco away from our children, they continue to cater to powerful interests, but they're not standing up for parents and children.
- 2004 — Gennifer Choldenko, Al Capone Does My Shirts, chapter 33,
- "Birthday Natalie," Natalie repeats. I feel a stab of pain when I hear this. Natalie has come a long way. I can tell because this sounds like the old Natalie. She isn't parroting like this hardly anymore.
- 2007 — J. K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
- He's loyal to people who are kind to him, and Mrs. Black must have been, and Regulus certainly was, so he served them willingly and parroted their beliefs.