a bird, such as a hawk, eagle, or owl, that hunts and kills other animals, esp vertebrates, for food. It has strong talons and a sharp hooked bill
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025
bird′ of prey′,
- Birdsany of numerous predacious, flesh-eating birds, as the eagles, hawks, kites, vultures, falcons, and owls, having a sharp, downwardly curved beak, talons, and, usually, soaring flight.
- Middle English 1350–1400
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
prey /preɪ/USA pronunciation
n., v., preyed, prey•ing.
n. [uncountable]
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025n. [uncountable]
- Ecologyan animal hunted for food, esp. by a meat-eating animal:Mice are the prey of owls.
- a person or thing that is the victim of an enemy, disease, etc.
- the action or habit of preying:a beast of prey.
- to seize and eat animals for food:Foxes prey on rabbits.
- to make raids or attacks in order to steal or destroy:The Vikings preyed on coastal England.
- to bring about a harmful influence;
to trouble:The problem preyed upon his mind. - to take dishonest advantage of another:loan sharks who prey upon the poor.
- fall prey to, [~ + object] to be a victim of:The economy fell prey to recession and high unemployment.
v. prey on or upon, [~ + on/upon + object]
prey
(prā),USA pronunciation n.
v.i.
prey′er, n.
- Ecologyan animal hunted or seized for food, esp. by a carnivorous animal.
- a person or thing that is the victim of an enemy, a swindler, a disease, etc.;
gull. - the action or habit of preying:a beast of prey.
- [Archaic.]booty or plunder.
v.i.
- to seize and devour prey, as an animal does (usually fol. by on or upon):Foxes prey on rabbits.
- to make raids or attacks for booty or plunder:The Vikings preyed on coastal settlements.
- to exert a harmful or destructive influence:His worries preyed upon his mind.
- to victimize another or others (usually fol. by on or upon):loan sharks that prey upon the poor.
- Latin praeda booty, prey; akin to prehendere to grasp, seize (see prehension)
- Old French
- Middle English preye 1200–50
- 2.See corresponding entry in Unabridged dupe, target.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
an animal hunted or captured by another for food a person or thing that becomes the victim of a hostile person, influence, etc - beast of prey ⇒
an animal that preys on others for food - bird of prey ⇒
a bird that preys on others for food - an archaic word for
booty 1
to hunt or seize food by killing other animals to make a victim (of others), as by profiting at their expense to exert a depressing or obsessive effect (on the mind, spirits, etc); weigh heavily (upon)
'bird of prey' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
aerie
- bateleur eagle
- buzzard
- cere
- eyrie
- falcon
- harrier
- honey buzzard
- io
- kite
- lammergeier
- osprey
- owl
- pounce
- prey
- raptor
- secretary bird
- stoop
- talon