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Definition of Shellfish
1. Noun. Meat of edible aquatic invertebrate with a shell (especially a mollusk or crustacean).
Generic synonyms: Seafood
Specialized synonyms: Mussel, Huitre, Oyster, Clam, Cockle, Crab, Crabmeat, Crawdad, Crawfish, Crayfish, Ecrevisse, Limpet, Lobster, Crayfish, Langouste, Rock Lobster, Spiny Lobster, Escallop, Scallop, Scollop
2. Noun. Invertebrate having a soft unsegmented body usually enclosed in a shell.
Terms within: Carapace, Cuticle, Shell, Shield
Generic synonyms: Invertebrate
Group relationships: Mollusca, Phylum Mollusca
Specialized synonyms: Scaphopod, Gastropod, Univalve, Chiton, Coat-of-mail Shell, Polyplacophore, Sea Cradle, Bivalve, Lamellibranch, Pelecypod, Cephalopod, Cephalopod Mollusk
Definition of Shellfish
1. n. Any aquatic animal whose external covering consists of a shell, either testaceous, as in oysters, clams, and other mollusks, or crustaceous, as in lobsters and crabs.
Definition of Shellfish
1. Noun. An aquatic invertebrate, such as a mollusc or crustacean, that has a shell. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Shellfish
1. [n -ES]
Medical Definition of Shellfish
1.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Shellfish
Literary usage of Shellfish
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1904)
"object wag solely to provide salaries for those engaged In enforcing the regulations
for the protection of shellfish In Brunswick county. ..."
2. Preventive medicine and hygiene by Milton Joseph Rosenau (1917)
"The parasite is contracted through a microscopic shrimp, or raw fish containing
the shrimp.1 Shellfish Shellfish include mollusks, as oysters, clams, ..."
3. Preventive Medicine and Hygiene by Milton Joseph Rosenau, George Chandler Whipple, John William Trask, Thomas William Salmon (1921)
"The parasite is contracted through fresh water crabs.22 Shellfish ... Shellfish may
be diseased when taken from the water, but little is known of the ..."
4. Elements of Water Bacteriology: With Special Reference to Sanitary Water by Samuel Cate Prescott, Charles-Edward Amory Winslow (1913)
"The pollution of areas devoted to the growing of shellfish and the consequent
pollution of the shellfish themselves is a matter of much sanitary importance. ..."
5. Supplement ... to the Public Health Reports by United States Public Health Service (1920)
"Shellfish—Taking from Contaminated Sources Prohibited—Duties of State Board of
Health. (Ch. 48, Act Apr. 5, 1917.) SECTION 1. It shall be unlawful to take ..."
6. Sewage Disposal by George W. Fuller (1912)
"SUMMARY OF EVIDENCE AS TO Shellfish POLLUTION Effect of Pollution.—The evidence
already presented leaves no room for reasonable doubt that to a limited ..."
7. Pathogenic Microörganisms: A Practical Manual for Students, Physicians, and by William Hallock Park, Anna Wessels Williams, Charles Krumwiede (1917)
"OF the shellfish commonly used as food, oysters are the most extensively eaten.
... In their normal habitat, in sea waters free from pollution, shellfish ..."