bonxie

English

Etymology

From Scots bonxie, from Old Norse bunki.

Noun

bonxie (plural bonxies)

  1. (UK, chiefly Shetland) The great skua, Stercorarius skua.
    • 2006, Graham Uney, Backpacker's Britain: Northern Scotland:
      Bonxies are more than happy to fly at you as you walk harmlessly across the moors, and they regularly clip people with a wing or extended foot []
    • 2020, Tim Ecott, The Land of Maybe, Short Books, published 2021, page 102:
      It is the large brown bonxies that heckle me as I pass across the high moor and approach the sheep gate.

References

Scots

Etymology

From Old Norse bunki.

Noun

bonxie (plural bonxies)

  1. (chiefly Shetland) the great skua, Stercorarius skua
    Synonym: skooi

References

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