shad
English
Etymology
Old English sceadd, either from Celtic (see Irish Gaelic sgadan (“herring”), Welsh ysgadan) or from Scandinavian (see dialectal Norwegian skadd (“small whitefish”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʃæd/
- Rhymes: -æd
Noun
shad (plural shad or shads)
- Any one of several species of food fishes that make up the genus Alosa in the family Clupeidae, to which the herrings also belong; river herring.
- 2003, Edith Grossman, translator, Gabriel García Márquez, Living to Tell the Tale, Chapter 1
- Each river had its village and its iron bridge that the train crossed with a blast of its whistle, and the girls bathing in the icy water leaped like shad as it passed, unsettling travelers with their fleeting breasts.
- 2003, Edith Grossman, translator, Gabriel García Márquez, Living to Tell the Tale, Chapter 1
- (South Africa) The bluefish, Pomatomus saltatrix.
Derived terms
terms derived from shad
- Agrakhan shad (Alosa sphaerocephala)
- Alabama shad (Alosa alabamae)
- allis shad (Alosa alosa)
- American shad (Alosa sapidissima)
- Astrabad shad (Alosa caspia persica)
- Azov shad (Alosa tanaica)
- Black Sea shad (Alosa maeotica)
- Caspian anadromous shad (Alosa kessleri)
- Caspian marine shad (Alosa braschnikowi)
- Caspian shad (Alosa caspia caspia)
- Enzeli shad (Alosa caspia knipowitschi)
- European shad
- gizzard shad (Dorosoma spp. et al.)
- hickory shad (Alosa mediocris)
- Killarney shad (Alosa killarnensis)
- Kura shad (Alosa curensis)
- Laotian shad (Tenualosa thibaudeaui)
- Macedonia shad (Alosa macedonica)
- North African shad (Alosa algeriensis)
- Pontic shad (Alosa immaculata)
- Reeves' shad (Tenualosa reevesii)
- river shad (Alosa spp.)
- Saposhnikovi shad (Alosa saposchnikowii)
- shadbird
- shadbush, shad bush (Amelanchier spp.)
- shad frog (Rana halecina)
- shad-spirit
- shad-waiter (Prosopium cylindraceum)
- skipjack shad (Alosa chrysochloris)
- Toli shad (Tenualosa toli)
- Thracian shad (Alosa vistonica)
- twait shad, twaite shad (Alosa fallax)
- Volga shad (Alosa volgensis)
Translations
fishes of the herring family
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.