BEAK


Meaning of BEAK in English

I. ˈbēk noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English bec, from Old French, from Latin beccus, from Gaulish

1.

a. : the bill of a bird ; sometimes : the bill of a bird of prey adapted for striking and tearing — often distinguished from bill

b. : the long projecting sucking mouth of some insects and other invertebrates (as in the typical bugs)

c. : the bill of some other animals (as the turtle and octopus)

d.

(1) : the tip of the umbo of a bivalve shell or a brachiopod

(2) : the prolongation of certain univalve shells containing the canal

e. : the human nose

his face, with small beak and the pricked skin of smallpox — Saul Bellow

f. : the projecting bony elements of the jaws of a fish (as in the pike) or of the upper jaw only (as in swordfish or sawfish) or of the lower jaw alone (as in the halfbeak)

2. : a pointed structure, formation, or construction:

a. : peak

b. : a beam shod or armed with a metal head or point projecting from the bow of an ancient galley for piercing the ship of an enemy

c. : promontory

d.

(1) : the spout of a vessel (as a teakettle)

(2) : the tapering tube of a retort

e. : one of the jaws of a forceps or pliers

f. : a continuous slight architectural projection ending in an arris or narrow fillet : the part of a drip from which water is thrown off — see molding illustration

g. : a process terminating the fruit or other parts of a plant and somewhat resembling the beak of a bird ; especially : a short awn on the outer chaff of wheat

h. : the mouthpiece of a musical instrument (as the flageolet, clarinet, or flûte à bec)

3.

a. chiefly Britain : magistrate , justice of the peace

b. : a master at certain British public schools

II. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English beken, from Old French bequer, bequier, from bec

: peck : peck at : strike or seize with the beak

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.