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Crayfish   /krˈeɪfɪʃ/   Listen
Crayfish

noun
(pl. crayfish, crayfishes)
1.
Warm-water lobsters without claws; those from Australia and South Africa usually marketed as frozen tails; caught also in Florida and California.  Synonyms: langouste, rock lobster, spiny lobster.
2.
Tiny lobster-like crustaceans usually boiled briefly.  Synonyms: crawdad, crawfish, ecrevisse.
3.
Small freshwater decapod crustacean that resembles a lobster.  Synonyms: crawdad, crawdaddy, crawfish.
4.
Large edible marine crustacean having a spiny carapace but lacking the large pincers of true lobsters.  Synonyms: crawfish, langouste, rock lobster, sea crawfish, spiny lobster.



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"Crayfish" Quotes from Famous Books



... shy and retiring animals which inhabit our woods and waters, or the borders of the sea, without making themselves conspicuous to man except when he seeks the larger ones for food, are the mollusca, usually confounded with crabs and crayfish under the popular name of "shellfish," except the few which have no external shell, which are generally called slugs. Hardly any part of the world (except deserts) is without them, but, shy as they are, it takes pretty sharp eyes to find them. Some come ...
— Boy Scouts Handbook - The First Edition, 1911 • Boy Scouts of America

... a man who, they say here, is somewhat of a robber. He was very desirous that we should give him a passage in the yacht, and another man wanted to come too, with some pointers, to show us the best spots for game, goats, turtle, crayfish, and sea-fish, with all of which the place abounds. Some cattle have also been introduced, and the island is much frequented by whalers, who go there for fresh provisions and water. There is nothing particular to be seen, however, and the scenery ...
— A Voyage in the 'Sunbeam' • Annie Allnut Brassey

... perhaps a couple of miles, when a great storm arose and swept away the unfinished structure. When he saw his work destroyed, he said, "Why didn't I wade straight through, as I did before, instead of wasting my time like this?" So he caught a supply of crayfish, which he roasted and ate, and then set out on ...
— The Hero of Esthonia and Other Studies in the Romantic Literature of That Country • William Forsell Kirby

... biological inquiry, How do they originate? To answer that question we must study the life histories of the minutest forms with the same continuity and thoroughness with which we study the development of a crayfish or a butterfly. The difficulty in the way of this is the extreme minuteness of the organisms. We require powerful and perfect lenses for the work. Happily during the last fifteen years the improvement in the structure of the most powerful lenses has been great indeed. ...
— Scientific American Supplement, Vol. XIX, No. 470, Jan. 3, 1885 • Various

... twist to the word or to some part of it from the hospitable desire to make the word at home in its new quarters, no regard, however, being paid to the sense. The most familiar instance in English is crayfish from the French ecrevisse, though it is well known that a crayfish is not a fish at all. Amongst the Mohammedans in India there is a festival at which the names of "Hassan" and "Hosein" are frequently called out by devotees. Tommy Atkins, to whom the names were naught, converted them into "Hobson, ...
— A Dictionary of Austral English • Edward Morris

... so in the water, home to dinner, hungry as swagmen, though the bill of fare never varied: it was always rabbit for dinner, crayfish for tea; for the butcher called only once a week, and meat could not be kept an hour without getting flyblown. The rabbits were skinned and in the stew-pot before they were cold; the crayfish died an instant death: one that drove the blood to Laura's head, and made ...
— The Getting of Wisdom • Henry Handel Richardson



Words linked to "Crayfish" :   family Astacidae, Palinurus, decapod crustacean, lobster, decapod, genus Palinurus, Astacura, Astacidae, shellfish



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