ossifrage

Etymology
From, from  , , from.

Noun

 * , the bearded vulture, the diet of which is almost exclusively bone marrow.
 * 1) * 1880, [uncredited English translator], The Man who Laughs by, Book the Third, Chapter I:
 * Calcareous lies, slate, and trap are still to be found there, rising from layers of conglomerate, like teeth from a gum; but the pickaxe has broken up and leveled those bristling, rugged peaks which were once the fearful perches of the ossifrage.
 * 1)  The young of the sea eagle or bald eagle.
 * 2)  The osprey.
 * 3) * 1871 ,Balustrion's Adventure: A Transcript from Euripides, line 117–24:
 * And we were just about
 * To turn and face the foe, as some tire bird
 * Barbarians pelt at, drive with shouts away
 * From shelter in what rocks, however rude,
 * She makes for, to escape the kindled eye,
 * Split beak, crook'd claw o' the creature, cormorant
 * Or ossifrage, that, hardly baffled, hangs
 * Afloat i' the foam, to take her if she turn.
 * She makes for, to escape the kindled eye,
 * Split beak, crook'd claw o' the creature, cormorant
 * Or ossifrage, that, hardly baffled, hangs
 * Afloat i' the foam, to take her if she turn.