because turkey in turkish has nothing to do with the bird.
The country whose opposite name is a bird is Turkey. The term "turkey" refers to a large bird native to North America. In a play on words, the country's name can be seen as the opposite of "Turkey" when considering the bird itself in a humorous context.
Turkey
The name of a bird that ends with "key" is "whiskey jack," which is another name for the gray jay or Canada jay.
a bird a bird
Turkey .
Turkey
Hindi. Hindi.
turkey.
The name 'turkey', describing the large domestic bird commonly bred worldwide for food, comes from the name of the country, Turkey.The term originated in the mid-1500s and was given to what we now call a turkey by the English, who mistook the bird for what they then called a 'Turkey fowl' - we know that bird better now as a guineafowl; their confusion could be forgiven: the two birds are related.The guineafowl was called a 'Turkey fowl' because it arrived in Europe from Turkey, although it didn't originate there; it came from Madagascar.The turkey as we know it today was domesticated by the Aztecs; the Spanish took the bird back to Spain in 1523, and from there it was introduced across Europe; the name - turkey - given to it by the English stayed with it, and that name travelled back to north America with the early settlers.So the roast turkey people in the US enjoy at Christmas and Thanksgiving, which didn't come from Turkey, gets its name from a bird popular with the English, which also didn't come from Turkey.
Turkey
Turkey da bird
The name of a large bird that fits that description is "Turkey."