Noun
Any bird of the order Impennes, or Ptilopteri. They are covered with short, thick feathers, almost scalelike on the wings, which are without true quills. They are unable to fly, but use their wings to aid in diving, in which they are very expert. See King penguin, under Jackass.
The egg-shaped fleshy fruit of a West Indian plant (Bromelia Pinguin) of the Pineapple family; also, the plant itself, which has rigid, pointed, and spiny-toothed leaves, and is used for hedges.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAbridged edition Links, JG (Ed), Penguin Books, 2001. Source: Internet
A copy of the book will be given to every first-year student at ACU in 2021, an initiative which ensures the sale of 7,500 additional copies for the author, Swedish writer Frederik Backman, and publisher Penguin. Source: Internet
A different strategy has been observed by The Penguin Book of Renaissance Verse from 1992". Source: Internet
After his death came Selected Poems (1972), followed by Peake's Progress in (1979 – though the Penguin edition of 1982, with many corrections, including a whole stanza inadvertently omitted from the hardback edition, is to be preferred). Source: Internet
After Tamerlane: The Rise and Fall of Global Empires, 1400–2000, Penguin Books, 2008. Source: Internet
Air Power by Stephen Budiansky – Viking Penguin Books 2004 – Page 200-208 World War II main The strategic bombing conducted in World War II was unlike anything the world had seen before. Source: Internet