What is another word for bevy?

Pronunciation: [bˈɛvi] (IPA)

Bevy is a word that describes a group of people or things. It can be used to describe a gathering of friends, a flock of birds, or a group of options to choose from. The word bevy is often used to convey a sense of abundance or variety. Synonyms for bevy include group, collection, set, ensemble, crowd, cluster, assemblage, and array. Each of these words can be used to describe a group of things or people, but each carries a slightly different connotation. Using a variety of synonyms for bevy can add depth and nuance to your writing, helping you convey exactly the tone and meaning you intend.

Synonyms for Bevy:

What are the hypernyms for Bevy?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Bevy?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

What are the meronyms for Bevy?

Meronyms are words that refer to a part of something, where the whole is denoted by another word.
  • meronyms for bevy (as nouns)

What are the opposite words for bevy?

Bevy is a word that means a large group or collection of something. Antonyms for bevy can include terms such as scarcity, paucity, few, or single. Scarcity refers to the state of not having enough of something, while paucity refers to a lack or shortage. Using the antonyms few or single emphasizes that the opposite of a large group is a small one, or just one item. Other antonyms for bevy might include words such as scant, meager, or bare, which all suggest a lack or absence of something rather than an abundance.

What are the antonyms for Bevy?

Usage examples for Bevy

One day the little bevy of feminine councillors looked at their work, and pronounced all beautiful, and all finished; and then there was a lull in the busy household, and then every one was conscious of being a little weary; and every one also felt, that it would be well to let heart, and brain, and fingers, and feet rest.
"The Maid of Maiden Lane"
Amelia E. Barr
They preserve their family or flock relations until late in the spring, and hence the bevy may be swept out of existence by one successful fall of the trap.
"Memoirs of Orange Jacobs"
Orange Jacobs
In the hall she was received by a bevy of sisters.
"Girls of the Forest"
L. T. Meade

Famous quotes with Bevy

  • When beasts went together in companies, there was said to be a pride of lions; a lepe of leopards; an herd of harts, of bucks, and of all sorts of deer; a bevy of roes; a sloth of bears; a singular of boars; a sownder of wild swine; a dryft of tame swine; a route of wolves; a harras of horses; a rag of colts; a stud of mares; a pace of asses; a baren of mules, a team of oxen; a drove of kine; a flock of sheep; a tribe of goats; a sculk of foxes; a cete of badgers; a richess of martins; a fesynes of ferrets; a huske or a down of hares; a nest of rabbits; a clower of cats, and a kendel of young cats; a shrewdness of apes; and a labour of moles.
    Joseph Strutt
  • A state of princes; a skulk of friars; a skulk of thieves; an observance of hermits; a lying of pardoners; a subtiltie of serjeants; an untruth of sompners; a multiplying of husbands; an incredibility of cuckolds; a safeguard of porters; a stalk of foresters; a blast of hunters; a draught of butlers; a temperance of cooks; a melody of harpers; a poverty of pipers; a drunkenship of coblers; a disguising of taylors; a wandering of tinkers; a malepertness of pedlars; a fighting of beggars; a rayful, (that is, a netful) of knaves; a blush of boys; a bevy of ladies; a nonpatience of wives; a gagle of women; a gagle of geese; a superfluity of nuns; and a herd of harlots. Similar terms were applied to inanimate things, as a caste of bread, a cluster of grapes, a cluster of nuts, &c.
    Joseph Strutt
  • As in hunting, so in hawking, the sportsmen had their peculiar impressions, and therefore the tyro in the art of falconry is recommended to learn the following arrangement of terms as they were to be applied to the different kinds of birds assembled in companies. A sege of herons, and of bitterns; an herd of swans, of cranes, and of curlews; a dopping of sheldrakes; a spring of teels; a covert of cootes; a gaggle of geese; a badelynge of ducks; a sord or sute of mallards; a muster of peacoccks; a nye of pheasants; a bevy of quails; a covey of partridges; a congregation of plovers; a flight of doves; a dule of turtles; a walk of snipes; a fall of woodcocks; a brood of hens; a building of rooks; a murmuration of starlings; an exaltation of larks; a flight of swallows; a host of sparrows; a watch of nightingales; and a charm of goldfinches.
    Joseph Strutt
  • To whom does this terrace belong? — With its limestone crumbling into fine greyish dust, Its bevy of bees, and its wind-beaten rickety sun-chairs? Not to me, but this lizard, Older than I, or the cockroach.
    Theodore Roethke

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