As an idiom, eating crow means you were humiliated because you were proved wrong. Presumably, eating actual crow meat is not a particularly pleasant experience. Similarly, embarrassment from misspoken words is unpleasant for the speaker. The exact date of the first use is unclear, but it probably was first used some time around 1850 in a story about a slow-witted farmer. The similar phrase, eating one's words, originated around 1571 when John Calvin wrote that in a gospel tract.
you "eat crow" when you have to take back something you once said.For Example:"the captain of the other team bragged that he would crush us. After we beat them, he was forced to eat crow."Eating crow (archaically, eating boiled crow) is an English-language idiom meaning humiliation by admitting wrongness or having been proven wrong after taking a strong positionTo recognize that one has been shown to be mistaken or outdone, especially by admitting that one has made a humiliating error
crow-pheasant
To crow about is to brag or boast about something. Let others know some news.
He walked as the crow flys
This is an American colloquialism, meaning to be forced to retract one's words or to admit that one was wrong. The exact origin is unknown, but it appeared in an 1850 story, so it's been around since before then. It seems to be related to "eating one's words." Crows are among the birds listed in the Bible as being unsafe to eat, so eating crow would be something very distasteful. A similar British phrase is "eat humble pie" ("humbles" are the intestines and less-tasty parts of an animal, so you get the same effect as "eat crow").
It's not an idiom because you can figure out the meaning. Roosters crow to show the other chicken's who's the boss, so crowing means you're proud of yourself. Something worth crowing about would be something you deserve to be proud about.
As the crow flies means in a straight line. The fastest point from point A to point B.
This proud Spanish surname emerged during the Visigothic era in Castile, deriving from the Basque language word meaning "crow".
crow
If he was right about it being a crow and not a rook he would crow "I told you so," in triumph.
The meaning of the name Crawford is From The Crow Ford
The phrase "Jim Crow Law" first appeared in 1904 according to the Dictionary of American English, although there is some evidence of earlier usage. The origin of the phrase "Jim Crow" has often been attributed to "Jump Jim Crow", a song-and-dance caricature of blacks performed by white actor Thomas D. Rice in blackface, which first surfaced in 1832 and was used to satirize Andrew Jackson's populist policies. As a result of Rice's fame, "Jim Crow" had become a pejorative expression meaning "Negro" by 1838 and when the laws of racial segregation - directed against blacks - were enacted at the end of the 19th century they became known as Jim Crow laws.