scarecrow

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. An effigy, typically made of straw and dressed in old clothes, fixed to a pole in a field to deter birds from eating crops or seeds planted there.
  2. A person or animal regarded as resembling a scarecrow (sense 1) in some way; especially, a tall, thin, awkward person; or a person wearing ragged and tattered clothes.
  3. Synonym of crow scarer (“a farmhand employed to scare birds from the fields”).
  4. Anything that appears terrifying but presents no danger; a paper tiger.
  5. Military equipment or tactics used to scare and deter rather than cause actual damage.
  6. The black tern (Chlidonias niger).
  7. The hooded crow (Corvus cornix).
verb
  1. To cause (a person, their body, etc.) to look awkward and stiff, like a scarecrow (noun sense 1).
  2. To splay (one's arms) away from the body, like the arms of a scarecrow.
  3. To frighten or terrify (someone or something), as if using a scarecrow.
  4. To spoil the appearance of (something, such as the landscape or a view), as scarecrows may be regarded as doing.

Pronunciation

/ˈskɛəkɹəʊ/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-scarecrow.wav /ˈskɛɚˌkɹoʊ/

Word forms

scarecrow scarecrows scare-crow skarcrow scarecrowing scarecrowed

Etymology

The noun is derived from scare (“to frighten, startle, terrify”) + crow (“bird of the genus Corvus”). The word displaced other terms such as bogle (now dialectal, dated), sewel or shewel, and shoy-hoy (perhaps imitative of the cry of crows). The verb is derived from the noun.

Translations

Finnish: saada näyttämään jäykältä
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