crawfish / ˈkrɔˌfɪʃ /

🎓大学词汇小龙虾小龙鱼龙虾虾类

crawfish2 个定义

n. 名词 noun

plural craw·fish, craw·fish·es.

v. 无主动词 verb

craw·fished, craw·fish·ing.

  1. Informal. to back out or retreat from a position or undertaking.

crawfish 近义词

crawfish

等同于 shellfish

crawfish

等同于 back away

crawfish 的近义词 5
crawfish 的反义词 2

更多crawfish例句

  1. The EPA’s summary of Oxitec’s tests, for instance, reports no effects noticed for feeding the aquatic mosquito larvae to crawfish.
  2. While resources are still available in the coast, Reyher says that where fish, shrimp, oysters and crawfish live and how they’re caught continues to change, placing a burden on those whose livelihood is staked on the setups they already have.
  3. Gabrielle Taper, 19, sat next to her two teenage friends and nibbled on crawfish and Andouille, a type of sausage made from pork.
  4. The incident is big news in Breaux Bridge, which bills itself as the “Crawfish Capital of the World.”
  5. Men, she says, worked 24 hours, forced to steam the crawfish and then peel them.
  6. According to the lawsuit, crawfish processors “depend on the H-2B workers,” and new wage hikes “will cripple Louisiana employers.”
  7. On the menu: New Orleans classics, including crawfish, shrimp, and gumbo.
  8. He tells me the crawfish in his stream are better than any in the neighbourhood; the water itself is pure, light, and delicate.
  9. On the 19th I resumed the march to the left and went into line of battle at Crawfish Springs to cover our right and rear.
  10. Out of the beds they scrambled in hot haste, and to each one six or eight of the crawfish were clinging.
  11. The crawfish were still clinging comfortably to various portions of the garments in which the two lads had gone to bed.
  12. But the two lads danced, kicked and beat about them with their arms so that no one could remove the crawfish.