Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

feather

noun
A plume; a general name of the covering of fowls. The smaller fethers are used for the filling of beds; the larger ones, called quills, are used for ornaments of the head, for writing pensThe fether consists of a shaft or stem, corneous, round, strong and hollow at the lower part, and at the upper part, filled with pith. On each side of the shaft are the vanes, broad on one side and narrow on the other, consisting of thin lamins. The fethers which cover the body are called the plumage; the fethers of the wings are adapted to flight.

feather

Kind; nature; species; from the proverbial phrase, “Birds of a fether,” that is, of the same species. I am not of that feather to shake off my friend, when he most needs me.

feather

An ornament; an empty title.

feather

On a horse, a sort of natural frizzling of the hair, which, in some places, rises above the lying hair, and there makes a figure resembling the tip of an ear of wheat. A fether in the cap, is an honor, or mark of distinction.

feather

verb transitive
To dress in fethers; to fit with fethers, or to cover with fethers.

feather

To tread as a cock.

feather

To enrich; to adorn; to exalt. The king cared not to plume his nobility and people, to feather himself. To fether one’s nest, to collect wealth, particularly from emoluments derived from agencies for others; a proverb taken from birds which collect fethers for their nests.