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Some used for food
Answer for the clue "Some used for food ", 6 letters:
conger
Alternative clues for the word conger
Word definitions for conger in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Conger may refer to any one of the following: Conger , some species of marine eel Conger (syndicate) , a type of business syndicate In the southeast USA, the Amphiuma (a genus of aquatic salamanders) USS Conger (SS-477) , a U. S. submarine
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1300, from Latin conger "sea-eel," from Greek gongros "conger," probably from PIE root *geng- , *gong- "a lump, rounded object."
Usage examples of conger.
When I was a small boy I fished one day for congers in the monster hole.
With an intensity like that of a captured conger I yearned to be hidden by the water.
I began a tale of an immense conger, three times larger than the one I carried, that had broken my line and escaped.
One room was largely given over to a buffet table burdened with platters of conger in souse, beef marrow fritters, meat tiles, friants, numble pie and florentine.
Upon this young actor's memory would be forever seared the information that the conger eel lays fifteen million eggs at one time and that the inhabitants of Upper Burmah have quaint native pastimes.
Figs in sesame sauce, rice with basil, another soup with egg yolk, neatly sliced conger eel, radish, and mushrooms accompanied by roe of sea urchin, several kinds of fish, including turbot, snapper, pike, and squid wrapped in a collage with varied types of seaweed, and lotus root mixed with intricately cut mussels, cucumber, and zucchini.
I recognized the Javanese, a real serpent two and a half feet long, of a livid color underneath, and which might easily be mistaken for a conger eel if it was not for the golden stripes on its sides.
Again that primaeval stirring in the trousers, reminiscent of a conger eel preparing to belt back to the Sargasso Sea where it belongs.
Now it was right that he should make the last gift which was his to give, not to the conger eels but to those who had been his friends.
In a street where furtive people were selling Clang, Slip, Chop, Rhino, Skunk, Triplin, Floats, Honk, Double Honk, Congers and Slack, Mr Tulip had an unerring way of finding the man who was retailing curry powder at what worked out as six hundred dollars a pound.