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Squab   Listen
Squab

noun
1.
Flesh of a pigeon suitable for roasting or braising; flesh of a dove (young squab) may be broiled.  Synonym: dove.
2.
A soft padded sofa.
3.
An unfledged pigeon.
adjective
1.
Short and fat.  Synonym: squabby.



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"Squab" Quotes from Famous Books



... eggs still, and squab-young. The last swift I observed was about the twenty-first of August; it was ...
— The Natural History of Selborne • Gilbert White

... and loud was the harping in the halls of Alef the Cornishman, King of Gweek. Savory was the smell of fried pilchard and hake; more savory still that of roast porpoise; most savory of all that of fifty huge squab pies, built up of layers of apples, bacon, onions, and mutton, and at the bottom of each a squab, or young cormorant, which diffused both through the pie and through the ambient air a delicate odor of mingled guano and polecat. And the occasion was worthy alike of the smell and of ...
— Hereward, The Last of the English • Charles Kingsley

... cook that oily bird so's it would taste like a pet squab. He used to take a pride in it, too, an' he liked best the men who ate most. Now I was real popular with Cookie. Those were the days for eats!" and the light-keeper ...
— The Boy With the U. S. Life-Savers • Francis Rolt-Wheeler

... in a dark nook stood an old broken-bottomed cane couch, without a squab, or coverlid, sunk at one corner, and unmortised by the failing of one of its worm-eater legs, which lay in two pieces under the wretched piece of furniture it could ...
— Clarissa, Volume 7 • Samuel Richardson

... reflexions on Pope's Essay on Criticism, he uses the following unmannerly epithets. 'A young squab, short gentleman, whose outward form tho' it should be that of a downright monkey, would not differ so much from human shape, as his unthinking, immaterial part does from human understanding.—He is as stupid and as venomous as an hunch-backed ...
— The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) - Vol. IV • Theophilus Cibber


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