Lark
Lark (lark) , noun
[Perh from Anglo-Saxon lāc play, sport. Compare Lake, v. i.]
Lark (larkt) , intransitive verb
Lark , noun
[Old English larke, laverock, Anglo-Saxon lāwerce; akin to Dutch leeuwerik, LG. lewerke, Old High German lērahha, German lerche, Swedish larka, Danish lerke, Icelandic lavirki.]
The European skylark, or lark of the poets (Alauda arvensis), is of a brown mottled color, and is noted for its clear and sweet song, uttered as it rises and descends almost perpendicularly in the air. It is considered a table delicacy, and immense numbers are killed for the markets. Other well-known European species are the crested, or tufted, lark (Alauda cristata), and the wood lark (Alauda arborea). The pipits, or titlarks, of the genus Anthus (family Motacillida) are often called larks. See Pipit. The American meadow larks, of the genus Sturnella, are allied to the starlings. See Meadow Lark. The Australian bush lark is Mirafra Horsfieldii. See Shore lark.
Collocations (2)
Lark , intransitive verb