Crossword clues for eels
eels
- Swimmers that may be electric
- Sushi-bar display
- Sushi kitchen supply
- Sushi choices
- Sushi chef's purchases
- Sushi bar layout
- Sushi bar display
- Stork's supper, sometimes
- Squiggly fish
- Squiggly critters
- South American freshwater shockers
- Sniggling catches
- Sniggler's wrigglers
- Snaky sea swimmers
- Snakeline swimmers
- Smorgasbord items
- Smorgasbord dish
- Slithery sea creatures
- Slithering sea creatures
- Slippery catches
- Slimy creatures
- Skinny, slippery swimmers
- Shrieking ___ (underwater terrors in "The Princess Bride")
- Shocking creatures
- Shockers in the deep
- Serpentlike fishes
- Serpentine sea creatures
- Seafood often smoked
- Sea wrigglers
- Scaleless wonders
- Sargasso Sea migrants
- Popular Japanese pizza topping
- Ocean burrowers
- Mud, sand and cusk
- Long, squiggly fish
- Lampreys, e.g
- Jellied ___ (English seafood dish)
- Flotsam and Jetsam, in "The Little Mermaid"
- Fishes that may be electric
- Fish with poisonous blood
- Fish whose young are called "elvers"
- Fish whose blood is toxic to humans
- Fish trapped in pots
- Fish that wriggle
- Fish that may be jellied
- Fish that are found in some sushi dishes
- Electrifying wonders
- Electrical fish
- Electric creatures
- Critters that may be "live"
- Congers or morays
- Charged fish?
- British pie contents
- Bait shop purchase
- Anguilliform creatures
- "Last Stop: This Town" band
- "Hombre Lobo" band
- "Electric" sea creatures
- "Electric" creatures
- Wrymouths' relatives
- Wriggly, watery critters
- Wrigglers sought by snigglers
- What Nash rhymed with "meals"
- Wet wrigglers
- Wet wigglers
- Wet shockers
- Very thin fish
- Uses a sniggle
- Underwater zappers
- Underwater wrigglers
- Underwater slitherers
- Underwater pit residents
- Unakyu roll fish
- Unagi and anago, in Japanese cuisine
- Twisty swimmers
- Traditional Cockney delicacies
- They're smoked by the Dutch
- They're slithery and slippery
- They're slippery
- They're served with rice in unadon
- They're into sushi
- They're hard to pin down
- They're capable of swimming backward
- They might shock you
- They may have electric organs
- They may be smoked or electric
- They may be shockers
- They may be charged at sea
- They lack pelvic fins
- They have no pelvic fins
- They get into sushi
- Tank shockers
- Swimmers with a glass variety
- Swimmers that don't kick
- Swimmers that can shock
- Swimmers that can be 13 feet
- Swimmers shaped like snakes
- Swimmers caught in pots
- Sushi-bar fare
- Sushi supply
- Sushi sources
- Sushi ingredients, sometimes
- Sushi ingredients
- Sushi elements
- Sushi dishes
- Sushi creatures
- Sushi candidates
- Sushi bar purchases
- Sushi bar fishes
- Stunning swimmers
- Stuff seen in sushi
- Sources of shocks in rivers
- Some sushi sources
- Some stunning swimmers
- Some reef residents
- Some fish in sushi
- Some electrical generators
- Some bottom-dwellers
- Some bioelectric swimmers
- Some are smoked
- Some are shocking
- Some are over 11 feet long
- Soft-finned fishes
- Soft-finned fish
- Snigglers' quarry
- Sniggler's targets
- Snaky sea dwellers
- Snaky sea creatures that can be electric
- Snaky sea creatures
- Snakelike, slippery sea creatures
- Snakelike selections at a sushi bar
- Snakelike sea creatures
- Snakelike group of fish
- Snakelike "Hombre Lobo" band?
- Smoked seafood
- Small-scale school
- Slithery school
- Slithering water creatures
- Slippery varmints
- Slippery sushi stuff
- Slippery sushi fishies
- Slippery sea creatures
- Slippery school
- Slippery fellows
- Slippery devils
- Slinky swimmers
- Slimy aquatic animals
- Slim, slithery fishes
- Slim ocean predators
- Slender, finless fishes
- Skinny dippers?
- Sinuous coral reef dwellers
- Sinewy swimmers
- Shrieking sea creatures in "The Princess Bride"
- Shockers in the "Journal of Biological Oceanography"?
- Shockers in a river
- Selections from a sushi bar
- Seals eat them
- Seal meal
- Sea cave dwellers
- Sargasso Sea dwellers
- Sand-burrowing marine creatures
- Rock band with a fishy name
- River swimmers
- River shockers
- Ribbon-like fish
- Reef wrigglers
- Prey for barracudas
- Predatory slithery fishes
- Pot-caught fishes
- Popular bait for catching striped bass
- Pit-dwelling fish
- Orinoco River inhabitants
- Ocean current sources?
- Ocean creatures that may have an electrical charge
- Ocean creatures that may be electrically charged
- Non-fat fishes?
- Narrow-bodied swimmers
- Morays, for instance
- Morays or congers
- Moray and lamprey
- Moray ___ (snakelike sea creatures that can exceed nine feet in length)
- Meals for seals
- Mature elvers
- Long, wriggly swimmers
- Long, wriggly fishes
- Long, slinky fishes
- Long, skinny swimmers
- Long "electric" fishes
- Limbless slitherers
- Lampreys or congers
- Lamprey look-alikes
- Lake snakes
- Lagoon predators
- Lagoon lurkers
- Jellied seafood
- Jellied fishes
- Jellied ___ (English fish dish)
- Jellied ___ (British delicacy)
- Japanese restaurant stock
- Hydroelectricity suppliers?
- Grilled fish in Japanese unadon
- Freshwater delicacies
- Flotsam and Jetsam in "The Little Mermaid," species-wise
- Fishes caught in pots
- Fisherman's slippery catches
- Fish with slimy layers
- Fish with lethal pulses
- Fish with charges
- Fish with "sawtooth" and "cutthroat" families
- Fish used as bait in bass fishing
- Fish that resemble snakes
- Fish that are long and skinny
- Fish that are jellied in British pies
- Fish such as morays
- Fish sometimes eaten by raccoons
- Fish served in the Basque dish angulas
- Fish prepared kabayaki-style
- Fish Nash rhymed with "meals"
- Fish in unakyu rolls
- Fish in the order Anguilliformes
- Fish for jellying
- Fish born flat
- Fish (often jellied)
- Finless wonders
- Fall migrators to the sea
- Exemplars of elusiveness
- Entrées for otters
- Elver's parents
- Elver's elders
- Elusive chaps
- Elongated wonders
- Elongated sea creatures
- Electrolocation users
- Electric and moray
- E's band
- Dodgy types
- Creatures that can have two sets of jaws and teeth
- Coral reef swimmers
- Coral reef denizens
- Consumers of crustaceans
- Congers, morays, etc
- Congers and such
- Congers and others
- Conger line?
- Conger line
- Certain reef dwellers
- British pie ingredients
- Bioelectric creatures
- Band with the 1996 hit "Novocaine for the Soul"
- Band whose "Saturday Morning" is featured in "Wordplay"
- Artful dodgers
- Aquatic creatures that gave Electro his power in "The Amazing Spider-Man 2"
- Aquarium sight
- Aquarium attractions
- Anago and unagi, e.g
- Anago and unagi
- (Slippery) fish
- "Souljacker" band
- "Slippery" swimmers
- "Mr. E's Beautiful Blues" band
- "I'm sorry Ms. Jackson, I am four ___" (misquoted lyric)
- "I don't mind ___, Except as meals ..." (Ogden Nash)
- "I don't mind ___ / Except as meals": Ogden Nash
- "I don't mind ___ / Except as meals" (Nash)
- "Fear Factor" fish
- "End Times" band
- "Electric" snakelike swimmers
- "Daisies of the Galaxy" band
- "A creel of __, all ripples": Sylvia Plath
- 'Electric' fish
- ''Electric'' creatures
- ___ and Escalators (board game in "SpongeBob SquarePants")
- Sigmoid swimmers
- Undulant ones
- Grown-up grigs
- Sushi fare
- Collared or jellied dishes
- Congers, e.g
- Wriggly fishes
- Members of a wriggly field?
- Wrigglers in reefs
- Slippery ones
- Trattoria entree
- Sushi supplies
- Lampreys' kin
- Slippery critters
- Spawning fish
- Grown-up elvers
- Snaky swimmers
- Sushi fishes
- Congers and kin
- Snaky fishes
- Slender fish
- They may be smoked or pickled
- Fish lacking ventral fins
- Reef lurkers
- Fish captured in pots
- They may be charged in the water
- "The Little Mermaid" baddies
- Snakelike swimmers
- Unagi and anago, at a sushi bar
- Snakelike fishes
- Swamp ___ (predatory fish)
- Slippery sorts
- They're caught in pots
- Lampreys, e.g.
- Some sushi fare
- Users of electrolocation
- Reef dwellers
- Often-smoked fish
- Slippery swimmers
- Unagi, in a sushi bar
- Pickled delicacies
- Elusive swimmers
- Smoked delicacies
- Snigglers' prey
- Sinewy creatures
- Some are shockers
- Aquatic zappers
- Kin of hagfish
- Coral reef dwellers
- Seals' meals
- Squiggly swimmers
- Catch in pots
- Smoked fish
- Fish caught in pots
- Lengthy lurkers of the deep
- Morays, e.g
- Denizens of the Sargasso Sea
- Jellied dishes in England
- Slithery fishes
- They may shock you
- Wriggling fishes
- Morays, e.g.
- Sources of some leather
- Fish with only minute fins
- Fish that can move equally well forward and backward
- They might store electric charges
- Spiny ___ (aquarium fish)
- Hydroelectricity providers?
- Aquatic shockers
- Unagi sources
- Some jellied dishes
- Elusive types
- Deep shockers
- Creatures with electrocytes
- They're difficult to grasp
- Some nonkosher fish
- 27-Down predators
- Mud ___ (bottom-dwelling fish)
- Ones unable to swim straight?
- Morays and congers
- Some use electric organs
- 88-Down, e.g.
- Sleek swimmers
- Ambush predators of the sea
- Slippery fishes
- Congers and morays, e.g
- Ingredients in some London pies
- Fish dish
- When split and cooked, these become spitchcocks
- Lampreys' cousins
- Conger and moray
- Japanese menu items
- Anguine fishes
- Seafood choice
- Slithery swimmers
- Some of the Apodes
- Wigglers
- Elvers' parents
- Wrymouths' cousins
- Anguillids
- Elusive ones
- These can be smoked
- Snipefish
- Sniggler's take
- Sushi provisions
- Moves via twists
- Slippery customers
- Spitchcocks
- Electricity generators
- Mud _____ (salamanders)
- Jellied delicacies
- Grigs
- Sniggles
- They start as elvers
- Nine-eyes' cousins
- Anguineous creatures
- They're often smoked
- Voracious teleosts
- Kin of nine-eyes
- Sniggler's catches
- Elvers' futures
- Vinegar ___ (worms)
- N.Z. tunas
- Ophidids' kin
- Fish resembling lampreys
- Slithery creatures
- Slippery shockers
- Some grigs
- Slithering sea-dwellers
- Sniggler's quarry
- Snaky ones
- These may be smoked
- Adult elvers
- Long fishes
- Kin of sand launces
- Aquarium sights
- Elongated fishes
- Smorgasbord delicacies
- Slithery ones
- Marine creatures
- Kin of ophidiids
- Fishes, in a way
- Elvers' elders
- Some are electric (and these are not technically of the namesake order, but that's what they're called, so let it go)
- Snigglers' catches
- What kippers do mostly around other fish
- Keep tabs on vacuous liars - they're slippery
- Strips head off fish
- Slippery types, scoundrels in the East End
- Slippery creatures
- Slippers into which these go
- Setters making G look like E? Slippery folk!
- Fish slumber mostly upside down!
- Fish fingers with no starter
- Feel sick, having eaten fish
- Long thin fish
- Boats heading off to fish
- Electric fishes
- Unagi, at a sushi bar
- Electric ___ (shocking fishes)
- Trattoria offering
- Twisty fish
- "Electric" fishes
- Sushi staple
- Electrified fishes
- Long swimmers
- Sinuous fish
- Sniggler's prey
- Snake-like fish
- Wriggly swimmers
- Sniggler's pursuits
- Shocking fish
- Sea creatures
- Jellied delicacy
- Skinny fishes
- Sinuous swimmers
- Serpentine swimmers
- Marine predators
- Finless fish
- Electrified swimmers
- "Electric" swimmers
- Sushi servings, perhaps
- Skinny swimmers
- Grown grigs
- Fish that can swim backwards
- "Beautiful Freak" band
- Unadon fish
- Sushi bar servings
- Sniggler's haul
- Mark Oliver Everett's band
- Broiled sushi fish
- Wiggling fish
- Thin fishes
- Sushi bar selections
- Slithery critters
- Slim swimmers
- Sargasso Sea spawners
- Reef residents
- Reef predators
- Great Barrier Reef denizens
- Undulating swimmers
- Squirmy catches
- Scaleless fish
- Sargasso Sea swimmers
- Reef denizens
- Paragons of slipperiness
- Elongated swimmers
- Wiggly swimmers
- Snigglers' wrigglers
- Snaky creatures
- Slithering fishes
- Slippery sea critters
- Serpentine fish
- Sargasso swimmers
- Otters' prey
- Nocturnal swimmers
- Moray and conger
- Marine wrigglers
- High-voltage creatures
- Bioelectric swimmers
- Bioelectric critters, perhaps
- Adult grigs
- Wriggly sea creatures
- They're trapped in pots
- They're slithery and may be smoked
- They're slippery when wet
- They're slippery and wet
- They may slither until smoked
- Symbols of slipperiness
- Sushi options
- Sushi bar stock
- Stork's supper, perhaps
- Slippery delicacies
- Slender swimmers
- Sinuous shockers
- Silver ___
- Shocking swimmers
- Shocking predators
- Sea slitherers
- Sea shockers
- Producers of currents in currents?
- Otters eat them
- Marine shockers
- Long-bodied swimmers
- Jellied or smoked seafood
- Japanese cuisine staple
- Great Barrier Reef swimmers
- Fishes that may shock you
- Fish without scales
- Fish without pelvic fins
- Fish in unadon
- Fish in sushi bars
- Electrifying swimmers?
- Electrifying fish
- Electric swimmers
- Curvy swimmers
- Conger fish
- Apodal creatures
- "Novocaine For The Soul" band
- "Last Stop: This Town" guys
- "Electro-Shock Blues" band
- Wriggly critters
- What many sushi bars offer
- Wet zappers
- Unadon fillets
- Twisting fish
- They're unarmed, but dangerous
- They're unarmed, but could be dangerous
- They may be shocking until smoked
- They may be shocking
- They lack ventral fins
- They can be smoked
- Symbols of elusiveness
Wiktionary
n. (plural of eel English)
Wikipedia
Eels (often typeset as eels or EELS) is an American indie rock band, formed in California in 1995 by singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Mark Oliver Everett, known by the stage name E. Band members have changed across the years, both in the studio and on stage, making Everett the only official member for most of the band's work. Eels' music is often filled with themes about family, death and lost love. Since 1996, Eels has released eleven studio albums, seven of which charted in the Billboard 200.
Usage examples of "eels".
But when the small and medium-sized eels were in the sack and the longshoreman, whose cap had fallen off in the course of his work, began to squeeze thicker, dark-colored eels out of the cadaver.
He bought two large and two medium-sized eels from the longshoreman for a song and tried to bargain even after he had paid up.
The man had trouble in catching them, for eels move quickly and deftly, especially over smooth wet stones.
Nevertheless the longshoreman, thrashing and snatching among the gulls, managed to cram a couple of dozen small eels into the sack which Matzerath, who liked to be helpful, held ready for him.
There was salt in the sack so the eels would wriggle themselves to death in the salt and the salt would draw the slime from their skin and innards.
Afterward the dead eels are carefully rubbed off with dry peat moss and hung up in a smoking barrel over beechwood to smoke.
The longshoreman, however, tied up the sack with the salted eels and tossed it nimbly over his shoulder.
He killed the eels with a crosswise incision in the backs of their necks and Mama, who had an over-lively imagination, had to sit down on the sofa, promptly followed by Jan Bronski.
Matzerath was right next door, threatening them invisibly but palpably with moribund eels that he brandished like a whip.
Probably, I figured, and so indeed it turned out, Matzerath, having slaughtered, cleaned, washed, cooked, seasoned, and tasted his eels, had put them down on the living room table in the form of eel soup with boiled potatoes, and when the others showed no sign of sitting down, had gone so far as to sing the praises of his dish, listing all the ingredients and intoning the recipe like a litany.
What, after all, could she be screaming about but eels, leading up, as everything led up once my Mama started screaming, to my fall down the cellar stairs.
She started in at breakfast on canned sardines, two hours later, unless there happened to be customers in the shop, she would dig into a case of Bohnsack sprats, for lunch she would demand fried flounder or codfish with mustard sauce, and in the afternoon there she was again with her can opener: eels in jelly, rollmops, baked herring, and if Matzerath refused to fry or boil more fish for supper, she would waste no breath in arguing, but would quietly leave the table and come back from the shop with a chunk of smoked eel.
Joseph Koljaiczek who ended under the raft, a prey to the eels, eel of thine eel, for eel thou art, to eel returnest.
Ford and Frank brought a fresh gust of enthusiasm with them, and they had Dick and his eels up from the grass in short order.
The two long, thin eels writhed together, lashing their tails and snapping their narrow pointed jaws.