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Definition of Lake salmon
1. Noun. Atlantic salmon confined to lakes of New England and southeastern Canada.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Lake Salmon
Literary usage of Lake salmon
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. American Food and Game Fishes: A Popular Account of All the Species Found in by David Starr Jordan, Barton Warren Evermann (1902)
"The Sebago lake salmon originally attained the largest size, ... At least the
Sebago Salmon are the largest and the Grand lake salmon the smallest of the 4 ..."
2. Three Years in Canada: An Account of the Actual State of the Country in 1826 by John Mactaggart (1829)
"... lake salmon. These fish are found weighing from twenty to sixty pounds, are
good to eat, although not so finely flavoured as those which live more in ..."
3. Frank Forester's Fish and Fishing of the United States and British Provinces by Henry William Herbert (1859)
"FRAZER'S LAKE. Salmon begin to come up the river, which lights up joy in the ...
STUART'S LAKE. Salmon arrived. In the month of June, we took out of this ..."
4. The Sportsman's Gazetteer and General Guide: The Game Animals, Birds and by Charles Hallock (1877)
"... GuU Lake, salmon. In the fall good trolling between the island, and in the
vicinity is good deer shooting. Mountain Lake is well stocked with salmon ..."
5. The Sportsman's Gazetteer and General Guide: The Game Animals, Birds and by Charles Hallock (1878)
"... Gull Lake, salmon. In the fall good trolling between the island, and la the
vicinity is good deer shooting. Mountain Lake is well stocked with salmon ..."
6. American Game Fishes: Their Habits, Habitat, and Peculiarities; How, When by W. A. Perry (1892)
"... or lake salmon of ... In British Columbia, too, a lake Salmon is found,
concerning which my information is at present ..."
7. American Game Fishes: Their Habits, Habitat, and Peculiarities; How, When by W. A. Perry (1892)
"In British Columbia, too, a lake Salmon is found, concerning which my information
is at present too meager to enable me to say more than that it is highly ..."