Note: The American jabiru (Mycteria Americana) is white, with the head and neck black and nearly bare of feathers.
The huge jabiru storks, stalking through the water with stately dignity, sometimes refused to fly until we were only a hundred yards off; one of them flew over our heads at a distance of thirty or forty yards.
But the conspicuous and attractive bird was the stately jabiru stork.
The most notable dinner guests were the great jabiru storks; the stately creatures dotted the marsh.
A great jabirustork let us ride by him a hundred and fifty yards off without thinking it worth while to take flight.
One day we found the nest of a jabiru in a mighty fig-tree, on the edge of a patch of jungle.
He did so, whereupon one young jabiru hastily opened its wings in the desired fashion, at the same time seizing the stick in its bill!
Here and there on the sand- bars we saw huge jabiru storks, and once a flock of white wood-ibis among the trees on the bank.
A jabiru stork stood on one leg, beak on breast, meditating, caring nothing for all that was outside its ruminating mind.
A row of chocolate babies stood outside that nest, with four jabiru storks among them.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "jabiru" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.