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seafood

/see-food/US // ˈsiˌfud //UK // (ˈsiːˌfuːd) //

海产品,海产,海鲜,海产食品

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : any fish or shellfish from the sea used for food.

Examples

  • If someone served me this sandwich at a waterside seafood shack on a fine day, I wouldn’t complain.

  • In October 2020, the FDA issued a request for information on the labeling of cell-cultured seafoods, but no date has been set for the announcement of regulatory details.

  • Sure, they could have sent seafood out in boxes, but as Cashion put it this month, “Johnny’s is an experience,” and she wasn’t inclined to deliver less than the “total package.”

  • Eventually, the government permitted a small team to visit the city, but prevented them from visiting hospitals or the seafood market where the outbreak was suspected to have originated.

  • Seaweed and seafood, which are more common in coastal diets, also contain enough iodine to make a nutritional difference.

  • Two men stepped out and entered a modest seafood restaurant called Mario's Fresh Shellfish.

  • El Cristo: You come to El Cristo to eat the seafood - fish empanadas, fish croquetas, grilled fish, you name it, they got it.

  • The property belonged to an old woman whose chain of seafood restaurants was popular with men in the government.

  • For seafood try Clamman in Southhampton, proudly peddling tuna, bass, scallops, and squid all caught by local fishermen.

  • Here, chefs serve trout and seafood brought from the neighboring state of Veracruz.

  • Due to lack of refrigeration the lighthouse diet became monotonous, although seafood was a help.

  • I expected to breakfast at home; now we will get some seafood.'

  • From the facts that I did have, something smelled of overripe seafood.

  • They have attempted to supply the community with seafood, but there are not enough sailing vessels.

  • Yet most of this part of the river is still beautiful and continues to yield good harvests of seafood.