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Hard-shelled creature that attaches itself to the bottom of a boat
Answer for the clue "Hard-shelled creature that attaches itself to the bottom of a boat ", 8 letters:
barnacle
Alternative clues for the word barnacle
Word definitions for barnacle in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Barnacle is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Gary Barnacle (born 1959), English musician Nora Barnacle (1884–1951), wife of author James Joyce Pete Barnacle , drummer for a variety of bands Thomas Barnacle (1846-1921), Irish trade unionist ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
early 13c., "species of wild goose;" as a type of "shellfish," first recorded 1580s. Often derived from a Celtic source (compare Breton bernik , a kind of shellfish), but the application to the goose predates that of the shellfish in English. The goose ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. marine crustaceans with feathery food-catching appendages; free-swimming as larvae; as adults form a hard shell and live attached to submerged surfaces [syn: cerriped , cerripede ] European goose smaller than the brant; breeds in the far north [syn: ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Evolutionary Morphology Darwin himself had done extensive morphological work in a detailed study of barnacles during the 1850s. ▪ Keep an eye open and you may spot a barnacle goose or a Bewick's swan. ▪ The block of leafy branches, ...
Usage examples of barnacle.
Up and up the dreadful threat would fly, booming and echoing through all the narrow, dark and twisty flues, until it found out Barnacle, exactly as Mister Roberts had divined, squatting in some sooty nook and, if there was room enough to move his arms, a-picking of his nose.
His proper name was Absalom Brown, but his owner, Mister Roberts, called him Barnacle on account of his amazing powers of holding on.
Vases, dishes, ornaments, cups and plates, jugs, a silver teapot and a china bust of the queen flew through the air as if 13 of their own accord, and crashed and banged against walls and furnishings while the little black figure of Barnacle hopped and darted hither and thither, frantically seeking a way out.
With a scream of joy Barnacle darted under his outstretched arm, rushed across the room and hurled himself at the drawn curtains.
Wood snapped, glass exploded and Barnacle, speckled with splinters, billowed through yellow velvet and out into the late afternoon!
Wonderingly he contemplated the prospect of a Barnacle improved, a comfortable Barnacle, owning, among other things, a smaller, more ignorant Barnacle, who would fetch his food and beer.
The wall had sprouted an enormous pair of arms, and Barnacle found himself seized in a grip there was no escaping.
For answer, Barnacle twisted his head until it nearly came off at the neck and did what he always did.
The brandy came, and Mister Gosling, with a reproachful look at Barnacle, poured it over his bleeding arm.
He just sat there, with his hands on his knees, like he was wondering whether or not to give Barnacle a clout round the ear.
Although the night was warm, Barnacle, like Adam before him, felt his nakedness and shivered.
Barnacle had naturally tried to bite the hand that scrubbed him, he had meanly interposed the brush, so Barnacle had broken a tooth.
Mister Gosling firmly, as if, by washing alone, and without a paper or a penny changing hands, Barnacle had passed into his ownership.
Somewhere, in the blackness of time past, Barnacle must have had a mother.
But still, it was plain that the big man expected an answer, so Barnacle did his best.