What Is A Common Extinct Bird Crossword Clue Answer?

2026-01-31 11:40:29 204

4 Answers

Una
Una
2026-02-01 01:34:03
Whenever I'm tinkering with a Saturday crossword I usually hit a checkpoint where the clue reads something like "extinct bird" and my pencil slides right to DODO. It's short, memorable, and fits 4-letter slots so constructors love it — plus it has a fun visual: the plump, comical island bird that can't fly. Beyond that staple, you'll sometimes see 'moa' in shorter slots, or 'auk' when the grid needs three letters. If the puzzle is being a little cheeky you'll get 'great auk' in a multiword theme answer or 'passenger pigeon' if the grid has a long space.

I also pay attention to the crossing letters and clue flavor. A clue with "flightless" almost always points to DODO, while a historical hint like "New Zealand Giant" screams MOA. For cryptic-style puzzles the clue might hide or anagram part of the word: that’s when knowing variants (DODOS, DODOES) and alternate extinct birds comes in handy. Personally, finding DODO still makes me smile — it's like seeing a recurring character in a long-running comic strip.
Reese
Reese
2026-02-01 17:30:07
A small set of crossword staples always pops up when the clue reads 'extinct bird,' and my inner pedant enjoys cataloguing them. DODO is the most frequent — easy to clue with adjectives like 'flightless' or locational hints like 'Mauritian.' In puzzles that demand brevity you'll also see MOA (giant New Zealand bird) and AUK or GREAT AUK for marine references. For longer entries, constructors sometimes opt for 'passenger pigeon,' a tragic, once-ubiquitous species that makes for a thematic multiword fill.

I like to think about the historical or ecological angle a setter might be signaling: a clue mentioning 'vanished in the 19th century' often points to passenger pigeon; 'once hunted to extinction' plus sea-cliff imagery nudges me toward great auk. Cryptic clues can be deliciously deceptive — DODO can be clued as 'silly person' in addition to the literal. All this makes solving feel part history lesson, part wordplay, and I enjoy the little detective work involved.
Quinn
Quinn
2026-02-04 08:38:25
If I had to pick the single most common crossword fill for 'extinct bird' it's short and punchy: DODO. I use it all the time in quick puzzles because it fits 4-letter slots and constructors adore that kind of easy, evocative word. But I keep backups in mind: MOA for three-letter grids, AUK when the clue hints at the North Atlantic, and sometimes longer ones like 'passenger pigeon' or 'great auk' when the grid allows multiword answers.

My strategy is simple — read the clue nuance, check crossing letters, and if there's any geographic hint I pivot accordingly. Puzzles are full of little habits like that, and curing a stubborn square by landing a DODO never fails to give me a small, satisfied grin.
Samuel
Samuel
2026-02-04 14:15:16
I've noticed in casual puzzle apps and newspaper crosswords the go-to fill for the clue 'extinct bird' is very often DODO. I tend to put it in almost reflexively because it's short, distinctive, and constructors like its symmetry. That said, context matters: if the clue specifies three letters or implies a New Zealand context, I'm switching to MOA; if it's marine or North Atlantic, 'auk' might be the intended fill. Sometimes puzzles want a proper noun — then you'll see 'passenger pigeon' or 'great auk' fill longer slots. I keep a mental list of common extinct birds so I can pivot quickly: DODO, MOA, AUK, PASSENGER PIGEON, GREAT AUK. Over the years it's become a tiny superpower — I can usually finish that corner of the grid without Googling, and it gives me a neat little rush every time.
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