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alewife
1[ eyl-wahyf ]
noun
- a North American fish, Alosa pseudoharengus, resembling a small shad.
alewife
2[ eyl-wahyf ]
noun
- a woman who owns or operates an alehouse.
alewife
/ ˈeɪlˌwaɪf /
noun
- a North American fish, Pomolobus pseudoharengus, similar to the herring Clupea harengus: family Clupeidae (herrings)
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of alewife1
Example Sentences
They learned a similar situation had occurred in the Great Lakes in the 1960s, when lake trout had exhibited similar behaviors after gorging on alewives, another fish chock-full of thiaminase.
"Those dams are preventing other native species like American shad, alewives, blueback herring and American eel from accessing large amounts of historic habitat," says Burrows.
In the 1500s some towns, such as Chester, England, actually made it illegal for most women to sell beer, worried that young alewives would grow up into old spinsters.
How far inland did the alewives come, I wondered, the dam removed after three hundred years and in the first year then they came in a rush.
Witches in tall black hats, also called alewives, brewsters and brewesses, tended caldrons they stirred with twisted twigs and kept cats to ward off rats.
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