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eel

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: Eel, e'el, eʼel, eel-, and -eel

English

Etymology

From Middle English el, from Old English ǣl (eel), from Proto-West Germanic *āl, from Proto-Germanic *ēlaz (eel), which is of unknown origin.

Pronunciation

Noun

eel (plural eels)

  1. Any freshwater fish of the order Anguilliformes, which are elongated and resemble snakes.
    • 1995 December 26, William J. Broad, “Creatures of the Deep Find Their Way to the Table”, in The New York Times:
      Off the United States, the National Marine Fisheries Service is helping industry explore fisheries for deep shrimp, rattails, chimeras, orange roughy, smoothheads, slackjaw eels, blue hake, skates and dogfish, which the National Fisheries Institute, an industry group, in an effort to improve their marketability, has renamed cape shark.
  2. A European eel (Anguilla anguilla).
  3. Various other animals that resemble true eels, chiefly in shape:
    1. Other ray-finned fishes:
      1. An electric eel (any knifefish of the genus Electrophorus)
      2. In the order Synbranchiformes:
        1. A swamp eel (any fish in the family Synbranchidae).
        2. An earthworm eel, also called the spineless eel (any fish in the family Chaudhuriidae).
        3. A spiny eel (any fish in the family Mastacembelidae).
      3. A deep-sea spiny eel (any fish in the family Notacanthidae).
    2. Certain amphibians:
      1. A conger eel, also called the Congo eel, amphiuma, and Congo snake (any salamander of the genus Amphiuma).
      2. A two-legged eel, also called the mud eel and lesser siren, Siren intermedia.
      3. A leopard eel, also called the leopard siren and reticulated siren, Siren reticulata.
      4. A rubber eel, Typhlonectes natans.
    3. A vinegar eel, a roundworm of species Turbatrix aceti.
  4. Someone or something that is sneaky and/or hard to catch.
    That Dennis is a right eel, he always seems to slip away from the scene at the right time.
    • 2003, Catherine Anderson, Only by Your Touch:
      His expression when incredulous. "Why would you think that?" He was a slippery little eel.
    • 2004, F. Scott Spencer, Dancing Girls, Loose Ladies, and Women of the Cloth, page 26:
      Philosophers and literary critics from ancient times, along with social scientists, physicians, theologians, and biblical scholars more recently, have tried to get a tentative handle, if not a firm grasp, on this "slippery eel" of humor and laughter.
    • 2016, Jody Hedlund, Newton and Polly: A Novel of Amazing Grace, page 131:
      John scowled after the dog. "Never fear, my lady. I shall get the sneaky, slippery eel yet."

Derived terms

Translations

See also

Verb

eel (third-person singular simple present eels, present participle eeling, simple past and past participle eeled)

  1. (intransitive) To fish for eels.
  2. (intransitive) To move with a sinuous motion like that of an eel.

References

Anagrams

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Estonian

Noun

eel

  1. adessive singular of esi

Ingrian

More information ↗︎○, allative ...

Pronunciation

Postposition

eel (+ genitive)

  1. before, in front of (of location)

Noun

eel

  1. adessive singular of esi

References

  • Ruben E. Nirvi (1971), Inkeroismurteiden Sanakirja, Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, page 38

Middle English

Noun

eel

  1. alternative form of el

Mopan Maya

Verb

eel

  1. to know, to have knowledge of

References

  • Hofling, Charles Andrew (2011). Mopan Maya–Spanish–English Dictionary, University of Utah Press.

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