codfish
IPA: kˈɑdfɪʃ
noun
- (countable) A cod (the fish).
- (uncountable) The flesh of the cod as food.
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Examples of "codfish" in Sentences
- Codfish roe and sardine roe are sold in olive oil.
- It included codfish, shrimp, sea bream, lobster, and crab.
- Probably tricky to beat someone with a frozen codfish too.
- Bacalhau is the Portuguese word for dried and salted codfish.
- The city fish is the codfish, which is plentiful off the coast.
- It was used for years as a storage house for codfish Bacalhau .
- Codfish was the staple with an occasional gourmet treat of salmon.
- Trout, sciaenoid fish, or codfish are commonly used as the wrapping.
- They immediately replaced the Icelandic codfish with less expensive pollock.
- They were both against me, but I insisted, and the codfish was a powerful ally.
- The great staple, the true meat of the population, is salt codfish, which is prepared in a great number of ways.
- [3] A kind of codfish, which has been soaked in lye for several weeks, and is a general Christmas dish in Norway and Sweden.
- Bacalhau à Gomes de Sá (Gomes de Sá Bacalhau) is a salted codfish, which is a dish born locally but also very popular nationally.
- We hope they'll choose one of these fish over something like the poor bedeviled codfish, which is still being overfished on George's bank.
- There are many good places capable of containing any number of vessels, and abounding in fish in the season, such as codfish, salmon, bass, herring, halibut, and other kinds in great numbers.
- Great Britain, Newfoundland has little direct trade with Canada, and moreover enjoys a virtual monopoly of one particular commodity, namely codfish, by which it manages to support its small population.
- On the Asbury Park boardwalk, dozens of people packed into a music-filled Langosta Lounge for a meal that featured traditional Thanksgiving offerings along with dishes such as codfish with provencal tomatoes and Italian sausage soup.
- On all sides, indeed, there flourished a strong British party, and particularly in New England, where the so-called codfish aristocracy (by no means extinct today) exhibited an undisguised Anglomania, and looked forward confidently to a rapprochement with the mother country.
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