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Webster 1913 Edition


Scarecrow

Scare′crowˊ

,
Noun.
1.
Anything set up to frighten crows or other birds from cornfields; hence, anything terifying without danger.
A
scarecrow
set to frighten fools away.
Dryden.
2.
A person clad in rags and tatters.
No eye hath seen such
scarecrows
. I’ll not march with them through Coventry, that's flat.
Shakespeare
3.
(Zool.)
The black tern.
[Prov. Eng.]

Webster 1828 Edition


Scarecrow

SCARECROW

,
Noun.
[scarce and crow.]
1.
Any frightful thing set up to frighten crows or other fowls from corn fields; hence, any thing terrifying without danger; a vain terror.
A scarecrow set to frighten fools away.
2.
A fowl of the sea gull kind; the black gull.

Definition 2024


scarecrow

scarecrow

English

Scarecrows in a rice paddy in Japan.

Noun

scarecrow (plural scarecrows)

  1. An effigy, typically made of straw and dressed in old clothes, fixed to a pole in a field to deter birds from eating seeds or crops planted there.
  2. (figuratively, pejorative) A tall, thin, awkward person.
    • 1749, Henry Fielding, The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling
      A consultation was now entered into how to proceed in order to discover the mother. A scrutiny was first made into the characters of the female servants of the house, who were all acquitted by Mrs Wilkins, and with apparent merit; for she had collected them herself, and perhaps it would be difficult to find such another set of scarecrows.
  3. (figuratively) Anything that appears terrifying but offers no danger.
    A scarecrow set to frighten fools away. Dryden.
  4. A person clad in rags and tatters.
    No eye hath seen such scarecrows. I'll not march with them through Coventry, that's flat. Shakespeare.
  5. (Britain, dialect) A bird, the black tern.

Coordinate terms

Translations

See also

Verb

scarecrow (third-person singular simple present scarecrows, present participle scarecrowing, simple past and past participle scarecrowed)

  1. (transitive) To splay rigidly outward, like the arms of a scarecrow.
    • 2006, Ron S. King, Nowhere Street (page 109)
      [] his small frame seeming scarecrowed in the over-large black coat.
    • 2010, Robert N. Chan, The Bad Samaritan
      An arctic wind whooshes down Columbus Avenue like the IRT express, catching her bags, scarecrowing her arms, and threatening to take her broad-brimmed hat downtown.