different between salmon vs brandling

salmon

English

Etymology

From Middle English samoun, samon, saumon, from Anglo-Norman saumon, from Old French saumon, from Latin salm?, salm?n-. Displaced native Middle English lax, from Old English leax. The unpronounced l was later inserted to make the word appear closer to its Latin root (compare words like debt, indict, receipt, island for the same spelling Latinizations).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: s?'m?n, IPA(key): /?sæm?n/
  • Rhymes: -æm?n
  • (Southern American English, sometimes) IPA(key): /?sælm?n/
  • (Canada) IPA(key): /?s?m?n/

Noun

salmon (plural salmon)

  1. One of several species of fish, typically of the Salmoninae subfamily, brownish above with silvery sides and delicate pinkish-orange flesh; they ascend rivers to spawn.
    Synonym: lax
  2. (plural salmons) A pale pinkish-orange colour, the colour of cooked salmon.
    Synonym: salmon pink
  3. The upper bricks in a kiln which receive the least heat.
  4. (Cockney rhyming slang) snout (tobacco; from salmon and trout)
    • 1992, The Shamen (band), Ebeneezer Goode (song)
      Got any salmon?

Derived terms

Related terms

  • samlet

Descendants

  • ? Burmese: ???????? (hcaila.mwan)
  • ? Hebrew: ????????? (sálmon)
  • ? Hindi: ???? (s?man)

Translations

Adjective

salmon (not comparable)

  1. Having a pale pinkish-orange colour.
    • 1977, John Le Carré, The Honourable Schoolboy, Folio Society 2010, p. 155:
      Smiley and Guillam perched disconsolately beneath it, on a bench of salmon velvet.

Translations

Verb

salmon (third-person singular simple present salmons, present participle salmoning, simple past and past participle salmoned)

  1. (slang, intransitive) To ride a bicycle the wrong way down a one-way street.
    • 2014: "Salmon, Don't Shoal: Learning The Lingo Of Safe Cycling" by Marc Silver, NPR
      Some cities discourage salmoning with clever signage, like this in London: "If you can read this you are biking the wrong way."

See also

  • (reds) red; blood red, brick red, burgundy, cardinal, carmine, carnation, cerise, cherry, cherry red, Chinese red, cinnabar, claret, crimson, damask, fire brick, fire engine red, flame, flamingo, fuchsia, garnet, geranium, gules, hot pink, incarnadine, Indian red, magenta, maroon, misty rose, nacarat, oxblood, pillar-box red, pink, Pompeian red, poppy, raspberry, red violet, rose, rouge, ruby, ruddy, salmon, sanguine, scarlet, shocking pink, stammel, strawberry, Turkey red, Venetian red, vermillion, vinaceous, vinous, violet red, wine (Category: en:Reds)

Anagrams

  • Almons, Lamson, Lomans, Malson, Sloman, monals

Cebuano

Etymology

From English salmon, from Middle English samon, saumon, from Anglo-Norman saumon, from Old French saumon, from Latin salm?, salm?n-.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: sal?mon

Noun

salmon

  1. a salmon; any of several fish in the subfamily Salmoninae

Esperanto

Noun

salmon

  1. accusative singular of salmo

Friulian

Noun

salmon m (plural salmons)

  1. salmon

Kabuverdianu

Etymology

From Portuguese salmão.

Noun

salmon

  1. rainbow runner, Elagatis bipinnulata

References

  • Gonçalves, Manuel (2015) Capeverdean Creole-English dictionary, ?ISBN

Middle English

Noun

salmon

  1. Alternative form of samoun

Piedmontese

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sal?mu?/

Noun

salmon m

  1. salmon

salmon From the web:

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  • what salmon are in lake michigan


brandling

English

Etymology

brand +? -ling

Noun

brandling (countable and uncountable, plural brandlings)

  1. The young or parr of the salmon, so named from its markings being, as it were, branded.
  2. A small, red worm used for bait in freshwater fishing.
    • 1939, George Orwell, Coming Up for Air, part 2, chapter 4
      And you also find another kind of worm called a brandling, which is striped and smells like an earwig, and which is very good bait for perch.

References

  • Brandling in the 1921 edition of Collier's Encyclopedia.

brandling From the web:

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