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Answer for the clue "New England seafood ", 6 letters:
quahog

Alternative clues for the word quahog

Word definitions for quahog in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 An edible clam with a hard shell found along the Atlantic Coast of North America, from genus (taxlink Mercenaria mercenaria species noshow=1), formerly ''Venus mercenaria''. 2 Very small clams used in chowders and other clam dishes. vb. (context intransitive ...

Usage examples of quahog.

He has been a high school wrestler, a scuba diving instructor, a quahog diver, a UPS sorter, a word-processing consultant, a private pilot, and a stay-at-home dad.

He has been a high school wrestler, a scuba diving instructor, a quahog diver, a UPS sorter, a private pilot, a freelance instructional and web designer, and a stay-at-home dad.

The oldest land animals of any kind are tortoisesCaptain Cook gave one to the king of Tonga that supposedly lived one hundred eighty-eight yearsand some mollusks, like the ocean quahog, a thick-shelled clam, can last a couple of hundred years.

What had surprised Eden was how much Sarah seemed to know about the man, yet when Eden tried to ask why, her beloved aunt closed up tighter than a quahog clam.

The forsythia gave off a golden glow on either side of the gates marked by granite pillars, and the crushed white quahog shells that served as driveway dressing brightened the grassy surround.

Hard clam fans find a decided kick in the somewhat aggressive, masterful nature of the quahog, as opposed to the gentler, rather whimsical personality of the humble softie.

He has been a high school wrestler, a scuba diving instructor, a quahog diver, a UPS sorter, a private pilot, a freelance instructional designer, and a stay-at-home dad.

Harvesting quahogs had been a lifelong hobby, and she suspected it now doubled as an additional means of support.

She found out later the lane was paved with the crushed shells of thousands of little clams called quahogs, and she had been awed with the utter wonder of it all.

Kris's one seaside vacation had included hunting for quahogs on a Cape Cod beach so she recognized the little holes left where molluscs had opened an air passage.

Howard and friends would dig pits in the beach and drop shiny new trash cans into the holes, then fill them with quahogs, lobsters, codfish, vegetables, potatoes and corn, allowing them to simmer over glowing coals buried deep in the sand while everyone drank themselves silly.