Definition of Teuchat

1. a shore bird [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Teuchat

tets
tetter
tettered
tettering
tetterous
tetters
tetterwort
tettigonian
tettigoniid
tettigoniids
tettish
tettix
tettixes
tetty
teuch
teuchat (current term)
teuchats
teucher
teuchest
teuchi-shiki
teuchter
teuchters
teucrin
teufit
teugh
teugher
teughest
teughly
teuks

Literary usage of Teuchat

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The New Statistical Account of Scotland by Society for the Benefit of the Sons and Daughters of the Clergy (1845)
"It is here called the teuchat, and the short storm that often occurs after field labour has commenced is hence called the ..."

2. Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century: Comprizing Biographical by John Nichols, Samuel Bentley (1815)
"The Lapwing is with us the teuchat.— The Fox is with us, the Tod.— The Toad, the Tedd— The Frog, the Paddock.— The Weasel, I suppose, ..."

3. Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century: Comprising Biographical by John Nichols (1815)
"The Lapwing is with us the teuchat.—The Fox is with us, the Tod.—The Toad, the Tedd—The frog, the Paddock.—The Weasel, I suppose, ..."

4. The Fruits and Fruit-trees of America, Or, the Culture, Propagation, and by Andrew Jackson Downing, Charles Downing (1883)
"... Egg. Summer teuchat Egg. Fruit below medium, varying in shape from ovate to conical, irregularly ribbed, pale yellow, washed and streaked with red. ..."

5. The New Statistical Account of Scotland (1845)
"It is here called the teuchat, and the short storm that often occurs after field labour has commenced is hence called the ..."

6. General Report of the Agricultural State, and Political Circumstances, of by John Sinclair (1814)
"A good apple, and the tree a good bearer. Summer teuchat egg. A small orange-coloured apple. Teu« chat is the Scottish name of the lapwing. ..."

7. The Geology of Central and Western Fife and Kinross: Being a Description of by Archibald Geikie, Benjamin Nieve Peach (1900)
"... and where also the Gair seam, 4 feet 6 inches thick, comes in its due place below teuchat Head, carrying with it its overlying shales, one of which is a ..."

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