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Answer for the clue "Important food and game fish of northern seas especially North Atlantic ", 7 letters:
pollack

Alternative clues for the word pollack

Word definitions for pollack in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Pollack Crater is an impact crater in the Sinus Sabaeus quadrangle of Mars , located at 7.9° S and 334.8° W. It is 96.0 km in diameter and was named after James B. Pollack, an American physicist (1938–1994). Pollack Crater contains a large light toned deposit ...

Usage examples of pollack.

Argonauts, they whispered, codlings, pollacks, hound-fish, tautog, tench, sea-elephant, they whispered, gillings, flounders, and beluga, the white whale and grampus, the sea-dog .

Daniel for his dragon, Eileen Pollack, Carol Houck Smith, and Dan Frank.

He took the child, passed it over, its head lolling, and Pollack eased it down on to the sacks in a competent, husbandlike manner.

On the Iraqi military in the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp.

For a description of the military operations in the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp.

For a more detailed analysis of Iraqi military history and capabilities, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp.

On Iraqi military effectiveness in 1973 and 1980, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp.

On Syrian military effectiveness in 1973 and 1976, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp.

Pollack, ibid. The Conventional Threat A glance at the numerical balance of forces in the Persian Gulf region illustrates the most obvious dimension of the Iraqi military threat.

On the Iraqi military in the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp. 168-175.

For a description of the military operations in the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp. 235-237.

For a more detailed analysis of Iraqi military history and capabilities, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp. 148-266.

On Iraqi military effectiveness in 1973 and 1980, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp. 167-176, 183-193.

On Syrian military effectiveness in 1973 and 1976, see Pollack, Arabs at War, pp. 481-523.

Down front, Ron Stone was tightening the drive belt on the old Milnor single‑pocket while Dave and his helper, a college dropout named Steve Pollack, were loading the industrial Washex machines with motel sheets.