English
Wikispecies
Etymology
From Middle English castrel (“staniel, bird of prey”), from Middle French cresserelle, crecerelle (“bird of prey”), usually assumed to be from crecelle (“rattle, wooden reel”) (modern crécelle), of obscure origin.
Cognates possibly include: Medieval Latin clisterella f, French crécerelle f and cristel m, Neapolitan castariello m and crestariello m, all sharing the same meaning.
Derivation from the assumed Vulgar Latin *crepicella, *crepitacillum, a diminutive of crepitāculum, from crepitāre (“to crackle”) is difficult to explain from a morphological point of view.
Instead, possibly from a root *krek-, *krak- (“to crack, rattle, creak, emit a bird cry”), from Middle Dutch crāken (“to creak, crack”), from Old Dutch *krakōn (“to crack, creak, emit a cry”), from Proto-West Germanic *krakōn, from Proto-Germanic *krakōną (“to emit a cry, shout”), from Proto-Indo-European *gerg- (“to shout”). Cognate with Old High German krahhōn (“to make a sound, crash”), Old English cracian (“to resound”), French craquer (“to emit a repeated cry, used of birds”). More at creak, crack.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkɛstɹəl/
- Rhymes: -ɛstɹəl
Noun
kestrel (plural kestrels)
- Any of various small falcons of the genus Falco that hover while hunting.
1917, John Masefield, Up on the Downs:Up on the downs the red-eyed kestrels hover,
Eyeing the grass.
The field mouse flits like a shadow into cover
As their shadows pass.
- The common kestrel, Falco tinnunculus.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
any small falcon of genus Falco
- Afrikaans: valk
- Breton: falc'hun
- Bulgarian: сокол (bg) m (sokol)
- Catalan: falcó (ca) m
- Czech: poštolka (cs) f
- Danish: falk (da) c
- Dutch: valk (nl) m
- Esperanto: falko
- Faroese: falkur m, smyril m
- Finnish: jalohaukka (fi), haukka (fi)
- French: crécerelle (fr) f, cristel (fr) m
- Friulian: falcon m
- Galician: falcón m, tartaraña f
- German: Falke (de) m
- Greek: κιρκινέζι (el) n (kirkinézi)
- Ancient: κέρχνη f (kérkhnē)
- Hungarian: vércse (hu)
- Icelandic: fálki (is) m, haukur (is), valur (is)
- Ido: falkono (io)
- Irish: pocaire gaoithe (ga) m
- Italian: falco (it) m, falcone (it) m, falchetto m
- Kashmiri: بٕہٕر (bụhụr), بٕۂر (bụhạr)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: شاھین (shAheen)
- Ladin: falcon m
- Latin: falco m
- Low German: Falk m
- Lower Sorbian: sokoł m
- Luxembourgish: Kréchel
- Macedonian: сокол (mk) m (sokol)
- Mudburra: dirdila
- Neapolitan: castariello m, crestariello m
- Norwegian: falk (no), hauk (no)
- Polish: sokół (pl) m
- Portuguese: falcão (pt) m
- Romani: falkono m
- Romansch: creivel, falcun
- Russian: пустельга́ (ru) (pustelʹgá)
- Scottish Gaelic: speireag ruadh f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: соко m (Bosnia, Serbia), сокол m (Croatia)
- Roman: soko (sh) m (Bosnia, Serbia), sokol (sh) m (Croatia)
- Slovak: sokol (sk) m
- Slovene: sokol (sl) f
- Spanish: cernícalo (es) m
- Swedish: falk (sv) c
- Turkish: kerkenez (tr)
- Ukrainian: сокіл m (sokil), сапсан m (sapsan)
- Upper Sorbian: sokoł m
- Welsh: cudyll m
- West Frisian: falk m
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Falco tinnunculus
- Arabic:
- Moroccan Arabic: بوعميرة (boʕemira)
- Asturian: peñerina (ast), aviquina (ast), peñereru (ast)
- Belarusian: звычайнага пустальга (zvyčajnaha pustalʹha)
- Breton: falc’hun logotaer
- Bulgarian: черношипа ветрушка (černošipa vetruška), керкенез (bg) (kerkenez)
- Catalan: xoriguer (ca) m, xoriguer gros m, xoriguer comú m
- Chinese:
- Hokkien: 紅鷹 / 红鹰 (âng-eng), 茶隼 (tê-chún)
- Mandarin: 紅隼 / 红隼 (zh) (hóngzhǔn), 茶隼 (zh) (cházhǔn), 紅鷹 / 红鹰 (hóngyīng)
- Czech: poštolka obecná f
- Danish: tårnfalk (da)
- Dutch: torenvalk (nl) m
- Esperanto: turfalko, kestrelo
- Estonian: tuuletallaja
- Faroese: grýtissmyril m, tornfalkur m
- Finnish: tuulihaukka (fi)
- French: faucon crécerelle (fr) m, crécerelle (fr) f
- Galician: lagarteiro m, peneireiro m
- German: Turmfalke (de) m
- Greek: βραχοκιρκίνεζο n (vrachokirkínezo)
- Ancient Greek: κέρχνη f (kérkhnē)
- Hungarian: vörös vércse (hu)
- Icelandic: turnfálki (is)
- Irish: bod gaoithe (ga) m, bodaire gaoithe (ga) m, pocaire gaoithe (ga) m, pocaire gaoithe coiteann (ga) m, seabhac buí (ga) m, seabhac gaoithe (ga) m
- Italian: gheppio (it) m
- Japanese: 長元坊 (ja) (chougenbou)
- Korean: 황조롱이 (hwangjorong'i)
- Latin: tinnunculus m
- Latvian: lauku piekūns m, lauka piekūns m, peļu vanadziņš m
- Lithuanian: pelėsakalis (lt)
- Neapolitan: castariello m
- Norwegian: tårnfalk
- Persian: دلیجه (dalije)
- Polish: pustułka (pl) f
- Portuguese: peneireiro-vulgar m
- Romanian: vindereu (ro) m, vânturel (ro) m
- Romansch: (Rumantsch Grischun, Sursilvan, Sutsilvan) crivel, (Surmiran) creivel m, (Vallader) cribel m, (Sursilvan) falcun m, (Surmiran) feila l'ora f, (Puter, Vallader) falcun brün m, (Puter, Vallader) filadè m, (Vallader) battalaura f
- Russian: пустельга́ обыкнове́нная f (pustelʹgá obyknovénnaja), пустельга́ (ru) f (pustelʹgá)
- Scottish Gaelic: clamhan ruadh m
- Slovak: sokol myšiar
- Slovene: navádna postôvka f
- Spanish: cernícalo común m
- Swedish: tornfalk (sv) c
- Telugu: నామవాచకం (nāmavācakaṁ)
- Turkish: bayağı kerkenez (tr)
- Ukrainian: боривітер (uk) (boryviter), постільга (postilʹha)
- Vietnamese: chim cắt (vi)
- Walloon: cressale (wa) f
- Welsh: cudyll coch m, cenlli goch f
- West Frisian: reade wikel
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
- Albanian: (please verify) skifteri kthetrazi, (please verify) petriti
- Basque: (please verify) belatz gorri, (please verify) belatz handi
- Friulian: (please verify) falcuç di cjampanili
- Ladin: (please verify) filadressa
- Lithuanian: (please verify) sakalis (lt)
- Macedonian: (please verify) ветрушка (vetruška)
- Maltese: (please verify) spanjulett
- Norman: (please verify) êteurcélet m (Jersey)
- Occitan: (please verify) moisset ros (oc)
- Sardinian: (please verify) tzrepedderi, (please verify) spradderi
- Serbo-Croatian: (please verify) vjetruša (sh)
- Serbo-Croatian: (please verify) ветрушка/(please verify) vetruška (sh)
- Turkish: (please verify) kerkenez (tr)
- Upper Sorbian: (please verify) wěžowy sokoł, (please verify) pustawa
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Further reading
Anagrams