stork
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++stork /stɔːk $ stɔːrk/ noun [countable] HBPa tall white bird with long legs and a long beak (白)鹳
Examples from the Corpus
stork• There are seagulls, he says, and terns and storks and cockatoos.• In the Slovenský Raj look out for black woodpeckers and storks.• A marabou stork was poking about nearby in a pile of rubbish, and I gave it a wide berth.• He is best known for a prayer that ended an invasion of storks.• We always used to say the guys on the Ridge were lucky, the stork brought their babies.• These storks are usually solitary nesters whose young, like those of Ibis, are dependent on their parents for food.nStork trademark na type of margarine sold in the UK, used especially for making cakes. Some people still remember an old television advertisement for Stork, in which people were tested to see if they could taste the difference between Stork and butter.Origin stork Old English storcstork nounStorkLDOCE OnlineChinese
long a bird long legs a tall and Corpus with white
Stork
Stork
trademark
a type of margarine sold in the UK, used especially for making cakes. Some people still remember an old television advertisement for Stork, in which people were tested to see if they could taste the difference between Stork and butter.
Stork
trademarka type of margarine sold in the UK, used especially for making cakes. Some people still remember an old television advertisement for Stork, in which people were tested to see if they could taste the difference between Stork and butter.
stork
stork /stɔːk $ stɔːrk/
noun [countable]
stork /stɔːk $ stɔːrk/
noun [countable] Language: Old English
Origin: storc
a tall white bird with long legs and a long beak
Origin: storc