How to Use condor in a Sentence
condor
noun-
Young condors raised by condors have a higher chance of survival in the wild.
— Margherita Bassi, Smithsonian Magazine, 30 July 2024 -
Mafall, who had the wingspan of a condor, scaled the back of the bus to tie wheelchairs to the roof.
— Lane Hartill, The Christian Science Monitor, 4 Apr. 2018 -
Back then, there wasn't a single condor left in the wild.
— CBS News, 12 July 2021 -
Born last spring, #1111 is the second condor ever to fledge, or learn to fly, in Zion.
— The Salt Lake Tribune, 22 Jan. 2022 -
Finkelstein has now shown that the condor’s fate is far from certain.
— Ed Yong, Discover Magazine, 25 June 2012 -
The body of an average condor can measure up to 4.5 feet tall and the wingspan up to 10 feet wide.
— Fox News, 19 July 2022 -
On the right side the American bald eagle flies toward the center to meet the condor.
— oregonlive, 22 Feb. 2021 -
In the sky, a lone condor soared south toward the three granite spires of Torres del Paine, just over the border in Chile.
— Mark Johanson, Travel + Leisure, 23 Apr. 2022 -
And by 2008, there were more condors soaring open skies than those living in zoos.
— Justine Calma, The Verge, 26 July 2024 -
Coastal-dwelling condors have more of these compounds than those living inland, the study found.
— San Diego Union-Tribune, 11 July 2019 -
Scientists also learned the condors’ carrion of choice has changed over the years.
— Byscience News Staff, science.org, 4 May 2023 -
This means that the condor doesn’t have to generate nearly as much lift as a reindeer would.
— Paul M. Sutter, Discover Magazine, 11 Dec. 2023 -
The condors typically lay eggs on cave floors or in large crevices.
— Washington Post, 1 Oct. 2019 -
From left to right: the South American condor flies toward the center.
— oregonlive, 22 Feb. 2021 -
The plan was to film a car in an alley using lights mounted on a hydraulic boom called a condor, but the hydraulics failed at the last minute.
— Jon Healey, Los Angeles Times, 16 Mar. 2023 -
The condor was placed on the federal endangered species list in 1967.
— San Diego Union-Tribune, 24 July 2019 -
On Easter Sunday 1987, the final wild condor was brought in.
— Jake Frederico, The Arizona Republic, 6 Oct. 2022 -
Birds like bald eagles, owls, condors, flamingos and more.
— Shelby Slade, The Arizona Republic, 11 June 2024 -
Lewis is six feet five and has the wingspan of a condor, along with a vertical leap that enabled him to start dunking in sixth grade.
— Ben McGrath, The New Yorker, 30 May 2019 -
The new arrival was identified as No. 1,000 in the program's roster of condor chicks.
— David Morgan, CBS News, 28 July 2019 -
One is a 4-month-old condor chick named Iniko that was living in a nest in a redwood tree about a mile from the facility.
— James Rogers, Fox News, 26 Aug. 2020 -
The image of Renée on a pay phone with fake rain and a [crane-like] condor lighting up the sky is burned in my brain as the beginning of everything.
— Joanna Calo, Los Angeles Times, 7 June 2023 -
This year, the 1,000th condor reared his head inside a rocky hillside at Zion National Park.
— CBS News, 23 Nov. 2019 -
Each condor, both born in captivity and in the wild, has been closely tracked ever since.
— Sophie Lewis, CBS News, 8 July 2020 -
The outlet added that crows and other species, like condors, are also attracted to shiny items.
— Marisa Sullivan, Peoplemag, 13 Oct. 2023 -
The remaining four birds slowly follow the first brave condor.
— Jake Frederico, The Arizona Republic, 6 Oct. 2022 -
Wildlife officials announced that the hatching of a chick in May brought the total number of condors in nature in the United States to 1,000.
— Mercury News & East Bay Times Editorial Boards, The Mercury News, 15 Aug. 2019 -
His nest in a redwood tree may have been destroyed in recent days by wildfire, along with the rest of the 80-acre condor sanctuary in Big Sur.
— Steve Rubenstein, SFChronicle.com, 26 Aug. 2020 -
Tim Hauck, condor program manager for the Peregrine Fund, said in the release.
— From Usa Today Network and Wire Reports, USA TODAY, 10 Sep. 2021 -
The scientists learned that the costs of gliding for condors were extremely low, barely twice the caloric expense of resting on the ground.
— Natalie Angier, New York Times, 12 Nov. 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'condor.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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