Birdie in a sentence as a noun

Assuming you are at par, a bogey requires a birdie just to get back to par.

"Open wide, look at the birdie, and then grab your ankles and back up to the officer ....

Maybe because they're so excited that they might make birdie on the hole that they lose their concentration?

There cannot be a little birdie sowing the seeds of insurrection.

A birdie told me that one of the companies from one of the YC clones may just appear on an episode soon- stay tuned!

The only thing about the latest update that bugs me is now the birdie is tilted more upwards than he was before.

Maybe even one bogey would hurt your morale far more than a birdie would help it, especially if you're a great player.

The GP is giving a big double birdie to his responsibilities.

Going for that birdie risks another bogie that would require another birdie to balance, and so on.

Birdie in a sentence as a verb

In a case like this it's also quite acceptable to disbelieve Apple and the "little birdie.

Great, people want birdies more than they don't want bogies, and perhaps it ties back into some aspect of your central hypothesis.

In other words, it's more important to them to avoid a bogey score than it is to capitalize on the birdie putt.

Many golfers admit that they're more interested in avoiding bogey than making birdie.

I'm surprised the John Gruber "little birdie" thing is treated as a legitimate source, especially in this case where it's outright absurd.

On the putt for birdie, they are not putting too much pressure on themselves; instead they are OK with settling for a par score so they take shots that aren't as risky.

I know a little birdie or three who would have interesting comments to make on that figure but they wouldn't appreciate the publicity.

Maybe I don't understand because I'm bad at golf and don't get a whole lot of birdie putts, but when I do I always go for it because getting a birdie is great, and getting a bogie is pretty average for me. I've never once just hoped to get it close, even for an eagle.

Yes, it is the nature of the latest innovations that are paying off. In other words, who cares if the flapping bird was supposed to go through the opening, but the software miscalculated and the birdie died?This line of argument supports the point that developer != engineer.

Birdie definitions

noun

(golf) a score of one stroke under par on a hole

noun

badminton equipment consisting of a ball of cork or rubber with a crown of feathers

See also: shuttlecock bird shuttle

verb

shoot in one stroke under par