He was acting like a complete turkey.
only a turkey would think it's a good idea to go for a jog when the weather drops below zero
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Pair salty turkey sticks with other nutritious options, like fresh or dried fruit, veggie sticks, and cheese for a complete snack.—Jillian Kubala, Health, 23 July 2025 An 18-quart roaster oven is large enough for up to a 22-pound turkey.—Bestreviews, Mercury News, 7 July 2025 More than 360,000 pounds of turkey bacon products have been recalled over a possible contamination with Listeria monocytogenes, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).—Matthew Robinson, MSNBC Newsweek, 3 July 2025 That one layers turkey, spicy provolone, Calabrian 'nduja, Calabrian hot honey and arugula on schiacciata.—Mackensy Lunsford, The Tennessean, 2 July 2025 See All Example Sentences for turkey
Word History
Etymology
Turkey, country in western Asia and southeastern Europe; from confusion with the guinea fowl, supposed to be imported from Turkish territory
plural also turkey: a large North American bird that is related to the domestic chicken and is domesticated in most parts of the world
2
: something that is a failure
the new play was a turkey
3
: a stupid or foolish person
Etymology
from turkey-cock, an old word for "guinea fowl," from Turkey, a country in Asia Minor; so called because at one time people thought guinea fowl came from Turkey
Word Origin
The bird we now call the guinea fowl was once called the turkey. Turkey was the shortened version of turkey-cock and turkey-hen. The guinea fowl's original home was in Africa. However, Europeans discovered that it was good to eat and did well in captivity, so they brought it back to Europe. Some people mistakenly thought that the birds came from Turkey, and the name stuck. Later, when English settlers first arrived in America, they found a large bird living here that was also good to eat. They called this new bird turkey because it reminded them of the turkey they were familiar with back in Europe.
country in western Asia and southeastern Europe between the Mediterranean and Black seas; capital Ankara area 302,535 square miles (783,562 square kilometers), population 81,257,000 see ottoman empire
Note:
Turkey was formerly the center of an empire whose capital was Constantinople. Since 1923 it has been a republic.
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