capelin
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Middle French capelan, from Provençal and Old Occitan capelan, from Late Latin cappellānus (“chaplain”). Doublet of chaplain.
Noun
[edit]capelin (plural capelins or capelin)
- Mallotus villosus, a type of smelt found in the Atlantic and Arctic oceans.
- 1983, Bodil Kaalund, translated by Kenneth Tindall, The Art of Greenland: Sculpture, Crafts, Painting, page 161:
- The birds are spread - so that we can see what they are like; and the men catching capelins are elevated up out of the umiak, where they practically float on the gunwale, so that we can perceive that they are the main figures and see their work-movements (fig. 250).
- 1996, (US) National Academy of Sciences, The Bering Sea Ecosystem[1], page 107:
- Capelin are widely distributed in the Gulf of Alaska, Bering Sea, and Sea Okhotsk, and along the Kamchatka Peninsula.
- 2009, Áslaug Ásgeirsdóttir, Who Gets What?[2], page 20:
- Capelin is a relatively small, pelagic species found in the North-East Atlantic, the Barents Sea, Southwest of Greenland, off the coast of Labrador, and around Newfoundland.
Translations
[edit]small fish
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Anagrams
[edit]Categories:
- English terms borrowed from Middle French
- English terms derived from Middle French
- English terms derived from Provençal
- English terms derived from Old Occitan
- English terms derived from Late Latin
- English doublets
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English nouns with irregular plurals
- English indeclinable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- en:Smelts