shark

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. Any predatory fish of the superorder Selachimorpha, with a cartilaginous skeleton and 5 to 7 gill slits on each side of its head.
  2. Flesh of this animal, consumed as food.
  3. Any fish of the class Chondrichthyes, especially an extinct shark-like holocephalian.
  4. A freshwater fish that resembles a true shark (Selachimorpha) in appearance or movement; a freshwater shark.
  5. Any fish in the genus Epalzeorhynchos.
  6. Any fish in the genus Balantiocheilos.
  7. An iridescent shark (Pangasianodon hypophthalmus).
  8. A roseline shark (Dawkinsia denisonii).
  9. A paroon shark (Pangasius sanitwongsei).
  10. A noctuid moth of species Cucullia umbratica.
  11. A university student who is not a fresher that has engaged in sexual activity with a fresher; usually habitually and with multiple people.
verb
  1. To fish for sharks.
  2. Of a university student who is not a fresher (first-year undergraduate), and especially towards the start of the academic year:
  3. To engage in sexual activity with a fresher.
  4. To cruise for casual sex with a fresher at a bar or club.
noun
  1. Someone who exploits others, for example by trickery, lies, usury, extortion.
  2. A sleazy and amoral lawyer.
  3. An ambulance chaser.
  4. A relentless and resolute person or group, especially in business.
  5. A person that excels in a particular field.
  6. A very good poker or pool player. Compare fish (a bad poker player).
  7. A person who feigns ineptitude to win money from others.
verb
  1. To steal or obtain through fraud.
  2. To play the petty thief; to practice fraud or trickery; to swindle.
  3. To live by shifts and stratagems.
verb
  1. To pick or gather indiscriminately or covertly.

Pronunciation

/ʃɑːk/ /ʃɑɹk/ En-us-shark.ogg

Word forms

shark sharks sharke sharking sharked

Etymology

From Middle English shark (used by Thomas Beckington in 1442 to refer to a kind of fish), of uncertain origin. Most likely from a semantic extension of the German-derived shark (“scoundrel”), see below. The fish was originally called a dogfish or haye in English and Middle English. Its name in Old English is unknown, although some uses of the word hranfisċ that do not appear to carry the sense of "whale" may have been referencing it. alternative theories Some older dictionaries derived the word from Latin c(h)archarias, c(h)acharus (from Ancient Greek), but admit that "the requisite [Old French] forms intermediate between E. shark and L. carcharus are not found, and it is not certain that the name [shark] was orig. applied to the fish; it may have been first used of a greedy man". Other older authorities speculated that the word might derive from Yucatec Maya xok (“fish”) (/ʃok/), as John Hawkins brought a specimen from the area where Mayan was spoken to England in the 1560s. However, the 1442 use rules out a New World origin for the word.

Translations

Abkhaz: аӷлам Afrikaans: haai Albanian: peshkaqen Amharic: ሻርክ Arabic: لُخْم Arabic: قِرْش Arabic: سَمَكَةُ الْقِرْش Arabic: سمكة القرش Arabic: يريور Arabic: قرش Arabic: مراخو Arabic: كلب البحر Iraqi Arabic: كوسج Tunisian Arabic: ركان Aragonese: tiburón Armenian: շնաձուկ Assamese: হাঙৰ Assamese: হাংগৰ Asturian: tiburón Asturian: escualu Azerbaijani: köpək balığı Azerbaijani: akula Bashkir: акула Basque: marrazo Belarusian: аку́ла Bengali: হাঙ্গর Bengali: হাঙর Breton: rinkin Breton: morvleiz Bulgarian: аку́ла Burmese: ငါးမန်း Catalan: tauró Catalan: esqual Cebuano: iho Chechen: гӏоркхма Cherokee: ᏗᎧᏳᎦ Chinese Cantonese: 鯊魚 /鲨鱼 Eastern Min Chinese: 鯊魚 /鲨鱼 Hakka Chinese: 鯊魚 /鲨鱼 Chinese: 鯊魚 /鲨鱼 Chinese Mandarin: 鯊魚 /鲨鱼 Wu Chinese: 鯊魚 /鲨鱼 Chuvash: акула West Circassian: хытыгъужъ West Circassian: акул West Circassian: хыхьэ Ngazidja Comorian: panganyile Ngazidja Comorian: mbamba Cornish: morvleydh Crimean Tatar: akula Crimean Tatar: köpek balığı Czech: žralok Danish: haj Dhivehi: މިޔަރު Dutch: haai Esperanto: ŝarko Estonian: hai
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