whooper

noun
whoop·​er | \ ˈh(w)ü-pər How to pronounce whooper (audio) , ˈh(w)u̇- How to pronounce whooper (audio) \

Definition of whooper

: one that whoops specifically : whooping crane

Examples of whooper in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

By the spring of 1976, federal breeding and recovery programs were underway, but there were still fewer than a hundred whoopers in the wild. Carolyn Kormann, The New Yorker, "The Trump Administration Finds a New Target: Endangered Species," 16 Aug. 2019 In addition to the sandhill crane, whoopers are one of only two crane species native to North America. Meg Jones, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "Milwaukee County Zoo's whooping crane pair act as foster parents to chick born at the zoo," 28 June 2019 The International Crane Foundation breeds whoopers at its facility and helps manage eggs plucked from nests of wild cranes in Wisconsin, particularly the Necedah National Wildlife Refuge where approximately 30 cranes are spending the summer. Meg Jones, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "Milwaukee County Zoo's whooping crane pair act as foster parents to chick born at the zoo," 28 June 2019 Birds in Louisiana’s young flock are gradually becoming mature enough to pair off — whoopers mate for life. Washington Post, "Louisiana’s whooping crane comeback: 5 chicks this year," 13 July 2018 That's the year the fest moved to its current site, and its whooper is even more dooperish now. Jim Stingl, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "Stingl: Answering your ridiculous Summerfest questions," 1 July 2017

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'whooper.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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First Known Use of whooper

1660, in the meaning defined above

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