Fish

  • 51fish — I. noun (plural fish or fishes) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English, from Old English fisc; akin to Old High German fisc fish, Latin piscis Date: before 12th century 1. a. an aquatic animal usually used in combination < starfish …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 52Fish — Стиль этой статьи неэнциклопедичен или нарушает нормы русского языка. Статью следует исправить согласно стилистическим правилам Википедии …

    Википедия

  • 53fish — 1. noun /ˈfɪʃ,ˈfɘʃ/ a) A cold blooded vertebrate animal that lives in water, moving with the help of fins and breathing with gills. Salmon is a fish. b) Any vertebrate that lives in water and cannot live outside it. God created all the fishes of&#8230; …

    Wiktionary

  • 54fish — 1) Hot guy. OMG! Look at the fish twirling his mustache over there, standing in the corner. 2) To describe something completely surreal or random. It comes from a joke How many surrealists does it take to change a light bulb? How many? Fish. Paul …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 55fish — 1) Hot guy. OMG! Look at the fish twirling his mustache over there, standing in the corner. 2) To describe something completely surreal or random. It comes from a joke How many surrealists does it take to change a light bulb? How many? Fish. Paul …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 56fish —    Used of a person in colloquial speech since the eighteenth century, especially in phrases like ‘an odd fish’, ‘a queer fish’. The word was sometimes specifically applied to a sailor. In modern American slang ‘fish’ can have many different&#8230; …

    A dictionary of epithets and terms of address

  • 57Fish —    Called dag by the Hebrews, a word denoting great fecundity (Gen. 9:2; Num. 11:22; Jonah 2:1, 10). No fish is mentioned by name either in the Old or in the New Testament. Fish abounded in the Mediterranean and in the lakes of the Jordan, so&#8230; …

    Easton's Bible Dictionary

  • 58fish — Many species of fish lived in the Sea of Galilee and the Jordan. They were sometimes caught with a hook (Matt. 17:27) but more often by letting a net into the water in a semicircle and gradually drawing it ashore (Matt. 13:47–50). There was an&#8230; …

    Dictionary of the Bible

  • 59fish — fɪʃ n. type of cold blooded aquatic animal with fins and scales; other aquatic animals (Informal); flesh of fish; fellow, guy (used in combination i.e. odd fish, queer fish) v. catch fish; try to catch fish; search for fish; search; try to&#8230; …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 60fish*/*/*/ — [fɪʃ] (plural fish fishes) noun [C/U] I an animal that lives in water and swims, or the meat of this animal • fish and chips a meal of fish and long thin pieces of potato, cooked in hot oil[/ex] II verb [I] fish [fɪʃ] 1) to try to catch fish 2)&#8230; …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English