crawfish 的 2 个定义
plural craw·fish, craw·fish·es.
craw·fished, craw·fish·ing.
- Informal. to back out or retreat from a position or undertaking.
crawfish 近义词
等同于 shellfish
等同于 back away
更多crawfish例句
- The EPA’s summary of Oxitec’s tests, for instance, reports no effects noticed for feeding the aquatic mosquito larvae to crawfish.
- 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.
- Gabrielle Taper, 19, sat next to her two teenage friends and nibbled on crawfish and Andouille, a type of sausage made from pork.
- The incident is big news in Breaux Bridge, which bills itself as the “Crawfish Capital of the World.”
- Men, she says, worked 24 hours, forced to steam the crawfish and then peel them.
- According to the lawsuit, crawfish processors “depend on the H-2B workers,” and new wage hikes “will cripple Louisiana employers.”
- On the menu: New Orleans classics, including crawfish, shrimp, and gumbo.
- He tells me the crawfish in his stream are better than any in the neighbourhood; the water itself is pure, light, and delicate.
- 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.
- Out of the beds they scrambled in hot haste, and to each one six or eight of the crawfish were clinging.
- The crawfish were still clinging comfortably to various portions of the garments in which the two lads had gone to bed.
- But the two lads danced, kicked and beat about them with their arms so that no one could remove the crawfish.