The Collaborative International Dictionary
Pickerel \Pick"er*el\, n. [Dim. of Pike.] [Written also pickerell.]
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A young or small pike. [Obs.]
Bet [better] is, quoth he, a pike than a pickerel.
--Chaucer. -
(Zo["o]l.)
Any one of several species of freshwater fishes of the genus Esox, esp. the smaller species.
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The glasseye, or wall-eyed pike. See Wall-eye.
Note: The federation, or chain, pickerel ( Esox reticulatus) and the brook pickerel ( Esox Americanus) are the most common American species. They are used for food, and are noted for their voracity. About the Great Lakes the pike is called pickerel.
Pickerel weed (Bot.), a blue-flowered aquatic plant ( Pontederia cordata) having large arrow-shaped leaves. So called because common in slow-moving waters where pickerel are often found.
WordNet
n. American plant having spikes of blue flowers and growing in shallow water of streams and ponds [syn: pickerelweed, wampee, Pontederia cordata]