| 单词 | sunfish | 
| 释义 | sunfishn. 1.  Any of numerous freshwater and marine fishes which have a compressed, discoid body, a colourful or iridescent appearance, or that bask in the sun. Cf. moonfish n.  a.  Any of the large marine fishes of the family  Molidae, found in tropical and temperate waters, having a cartilaginous skeleton and an almost circular laterally compressed body with tall anal and dorsal fins near the rear of the body.Also called head-fish, mola.ocean sunfish, short sunfish: see the first element. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > order Tetraodontiformes (puffers) > 			[noun]		 > family Molidae (ocean sun-fish) > member of genus Mola molebat1598 mole1601 sunfisha1630 moonfish1646 mola1678 sun perch1804 ocean sunfish1900 short diodon- a1630    F. Higginson True Relation Last Voy. New Eng. in  T. Hutchinson Hutchinson Papers 		(1845)	 I. 43  				A large round fish sayling by the ship's side, about a yard in length and roundness [printed rounders] every way. The mariners called it a sunne fish; it spreadeth out the finnes like beames on every side 4 or 5. 1659    D. Pell Πελαγος 203  				The Sun-fish lyes carelessly upon the salt-waters, exposing of himself in the very warmth of summer. 1730    T. Boreman Descr. Three Hundred Animals  iii. 165  				The Sun-Fish has a wide and short Body. 1742    Philos. Trans. 1739–40 		(Royal Soc.)	 41 343  				A Sun-fish weighing about 500 Pound Weight. 1804    G. Shaw Gen. Zool. V.  ii. 439  				Oblong Sun-Fish... Variegated Sun-Fish. 1839    T. Beale Nat. Hist. Sperm Whale 212  				The ugly sun-fish now and then came floating by. 1931    E. G. Boulenger Fishes xix. 156  				The marine Sunfishes or Head-fishes (Molidæ) have the circular body abbreviated behind, so that the caudal, dorsal and anal fins appear to be attached to the head. 1988    Jrnl. Mammalogy 69 630  				The [killer] whale held a struggling sunfish in its jaws and was biting it. 2016    Sc. Daily Mail 		(Nexis)	 7 July 66  				The sunfish (Mola mola) is one of the strangest animals in the ocean.  b.  Chiefly U.S. Any of various small ray-finned freshwater fishes of the family  Centrarchidae, esp. of the genera  Lepomis and  Acantharchus, found in slow moving bodies of water in North America where it is popular as a game fish. Also with distinguishing word. Cf. sunny n.bluegill sunfish, green sunfish, mud sunfish, red-eared sunfish, redear sunfish, spotted sunfish: see the first element.Certain species of sunfish are also called bass, bluegill, bream, crappie, and pumpkin seed (frequently with distinguishing word). ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Centrarchidae (sun-fish) > 			[noun]		 > member of genus Lepomis (sun-fish) bream1634 roach1637 sunfish1685 round robin1709 yellowbelly1775 redbelly1791 brim1795 sun perch1804 pumpkin seed1815 sunny1835 bluegill1877 redbreast1877 tobacco-box1877 red-eared sunfish1889 shell-cracker1889 sun1896 redear1931 the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Centrarchidae (sun-fish) > 			[noun]		 > member of genus Pomotis sunfish1685 sun perch1804 sunny1835 mud bass1884 sun1896 1685    W. Penn Further Acct. Pennsylvania 9  				There is the Catfish, or Flathead..Perch, black and white, Smelt, Sunfish, &c. 1791    W. Bartram Trav. N. & S. Carolina 176  				The golden bream or sun-fish, the red bellied bream..also abound here. 1796    J. Morse Amer. Universal Geogr. 		(new ed.)	 I. 482  				There are few fish in the rivers, but..in the lakes, yellow-perch, sun-fish, salmon-trout, cat-fish, and a variety of others. 1842    Nat. Hist. N.Y., Zool.  iv. 31  				The Common Pond Fish. Pomotis vulgaris... This beautiful little fish has derived one of its popular names viz. Sun-fish, from the glittering colors it displays while basking in the sun. 1867    Rep. Commissioner Agric. 1866 409  				Few or no fishes are so familiar to all..as are the species which are most commonly known under the various names of sun-fishes, rock-bass,..&c., and which belong to the family of Centrarchidæ. 1888    G. B. Goode Amer. Fishes 67  				The Blue Sun-fish, Lepomis pallidus, is also known as the ‘Blue Bream’. 1914    Brainerd 		(Minnesota)	 Daily Disp. 25 Sept. 5/4  				Mrs. Frank was contentedly pulling out three inch sun fish. She had a little hook and was using angle worms for bait. 1960    H. S. Zim Guide to Everglades 40  				Largemouth bass (a sunfish) is the region's gamest fresh-water fish. 1996    D. Sternberg  & B. Ignizio Panfish 36/1  				In murky waters, sunfish may nest as shallow as 6 inches. 2012    Oecologia 168 1113/2  				Sunfish were added to the experimental wetlands 3 days prior to additions of crayfish.  c.  Originally Irish English. The basking shark,  Cetorhinus maximus. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > subclass Elasmobranchii > order Pleurotremata > 			[noun]		 > member of family Cetorhinidae (basking shark) fish-mariner1605 sail-fish1605 pricker1701 sunfish1734 basking-shark1769 bone shark1802 hoe-mother1805 1734    E. Lee Statute-law of Irel. Common-placed 194  				Four Lamps to be on every Bridge in Dublin, and Oil of Sunfish may be used in all Places. 1746    C. Smith Antient & Present State Waterford xi. 271  				This coast is pretty much frequented by Porpoises, Sun-fish, Seals, &c. 1797    Encycl. Brit. XVII. 714/2  				Squalus... The maximus, basking shark, or the sun-fish of the Irish. 1847    Daily News 		(London)	 23 July 3/6  				As to the remunerative employment likely to be afforded in the capture of the sun-fish, or basking shark, Mr. Andrews states that they appear off the coast from April to June, from Achill Head..to Skelly's Rocks. 1886    Encycl. Brit. XXI. 777/2  				The Basking Shark (Selache maxima), sometimes erroneously called ‘Sun-Fish’..may be seen in calm weather..motionless, with the upper part of the back raised above the surface of the water. 1925    Country Life 19 Sept. 447/1  				I have since been told by nautical friends that the monster was probably a sun-fish. 1988    Irish Times 7 May  a5/2  				A British campaign to ‘save’ the basking shark—the ‘sunfish’ of Achill and Aran. 2016    M. Brockenbrough Shark Week iii. 51/1  				Also called sunfish and sailfish, basking sharks have absolutely enormous mouths.  d.  Chiefly U.S. regional. Either of two carangid fishes of the genus  Selene, the lookdown ( S. vomer) and the Atlantic moonfish ( S. setapinnis). Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > suborder Scombroidei (mackerel) > 			[noun]		 > family Carangidae (scads) > member of genus Selene or Vomer (moon-fish) moonfish1646 hogback1832 sunfish1877 lookdown1882 horse-fish1883 horse-head1884 1877    Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 208  				Vomer setipinnis... Horse-fish. Sun-fish... Selene argentea... Moon-fish. Sun-fish... The fishermen of the locality recognize no specific differences, calling them all either moon- or sun-fish. 1884    G. B. Goode in  G. B. Goode et al.  Fisheries U.S.: Sect. I 322  				Selene setipinnis..known..in North Carolina as the ‘Moonfish’ or ‘Sunfish’. 1911    Fisheries U.S. 1908 		(U.S. Dept. Commerce & Labor)	 308/1  				Blunt-nosed shiner (Selene vomer).—A familiar food fish found along the Atlantic coast from Florida to Cape Cod and in the Gulf of Mexico. It is known..in North Carolina as ‘moonfish’ or ‘sunfish’. 1983    J. S. Zaneveld Caribbean Fish Life 59  				Vomer setapinnis..Atlantic moonfish, bluntnosed shiner, dollarfish;..horsefish; moonfish; pugnosed shiner, sunfish.  e.  The opah,  Lampris guttatus. Also called moonfish. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > 			[noun]		 > order Lampridiformes > member of family Lamprididae (opah) moonfish1646 kingfish1653 opah1752 sea-pert1880 sunfish1880 1880    A. Günther Introd. Study of Fishes 454  				The ‘Sun-fish’ (L. luna) is one of the most beautiful fishes of the Atlantic. 1884    Encycl. Brit. XVII. 777/1  				Opah (Lampris luna)... From its habit of coming to the surface in calm weather, showing its high dorsal fin above the water, it has also received the name of ‘sun-fish’. 1899    Fishing Gaz. 262/2  				Imagine my surprise and delight to find that the so-called sun fish was a magnificent specimen of the much wanted opah. 1929    Calif. Fisheries 9 Apr. 19/2  				This particular Sunfish strayed into a net and was brought in to the Mutual Fish Company. 1980    W. Root Food 169/1  				The fish called the Jerusalem haddock in Africa is not a haddock, but the opah, the sunfish or the kingfish (the last two names are shared with several others), Lampris regius. 2015    Lynn News 		(Nexis)	 7 Jan.  				It's an Opah fish (Lampris guttatus), also known as a Sun fish or Moon fish, an extremely rare find. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Echinodermata > 			[noun]		 > subphylum Eleutherozoa > class Asteroidea > order Spinulosa > genus Solaster > member of sunfish1681 sun star1841 sun starfish1850 1681    N. Grew Musæum Regalis Societatis  i. v. iv. 124  				A Star-Fish with Twelve Rays; by some called Sun-Fish. 1855    Fraser's Mag. May 547/1  				The next day the ‘sun-fish’ itself died, and was removed to prevent injury to the water from its rapid decomposition. 1860    M. P. Merrifield Sketch Nat. Hist. Brighton v. 58  				Solaster papposa, sometimes called the Sun-fish, whose numerous rays cause it to resemble a sun rather than a star. 1880    J. H. Wythe Sci. of Life xii. 185  				The many-rayed Solaster, or Sun-fish.  3.  U.S. In a rodeo: a manner of bucking in which the horse or steer twists its body into a crescent shape at the top of its jump. Cf. sunfish v. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > habits and actions of horse > 			[noun]		 > leap > buck buck-jump1861 bucka1877 sunfish1903 1903    Wide World Mag. Mar. 548/1  				A broncho named ‘E.A.’..used a combination of ‘sun-fish’ and ‘twister’. 1939    P. A. Rollins Gone Haywire 260  				One prodigious forward jump, then a ‘sunfish’, and the beast raced into a ‘circle buck’. 1998    M. Allen Rodeo Cowboys in N. Amer. Imagination iv. 113  				The bronc is in a classic sunfish pose, his body contorted into the shape of a crescent as he strains (and fails) to throw the cowboy. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, January 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). sunfishv. Originally and chiefly U.S.   intransitive. Of a horse or steer: to buck violently with a twisting motion, esp. by twisting its body into a crescent shape at the top of its jump. Also in extended use. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > habits and actions of horse > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > leap or prance > buck buck1848 sunfish1888 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > upward movement > leaping, springing, or jumping > leap, spring, or jump			[verb (intransitive)]		 > somersault tumbc1000 tumble1303 to top over tail1545 somerset1599 pitch-pole1682 topple1802 somersault1858 sunfish1923 1888    T. Roosevelt in  Cent. Mag. Apr. 854/2  				He may buck steadily in one place, or ‘sunfish’,—that is, bring first one shoulder down almost to the ground and then the other. 1923    Cent. Mag. 106 831/2  				Down across Texas it went sunfishin', back-flippin', side-windin'... The Staked Plains used to be heavily timbered until that big wind swiped the trees off. 1971    A. P. McInnes Dunlevy 86  				Sometimes the mare sunfished, but the girl stuck solidly. 1979    D. Anthony Long Hard Cure xxv. 195  				He'd ducked..and gone to one knee, sunfishing a little. His right arm moved..and his pistol boomed loud. 2002    D. Y. Goble Provin' Up vi. 83  				For about ten minutes the bronco sunfished and bucked. Derivatives  ˈsunfisher  n. a horse or steer that sunfishes. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > family Equidae (general equines) > habits and actions of horse > 			[noun]		 > leap > buck > horse given to buck-jumper1848 bucker1884 sunfisher1903 1903    Outing Dec. 335/2  				If the forelegs of the ‘sunfisher’ curl under him as he rises, he gives his rider little uneasiness. 1924    W. M. Raine Troubled Waters v. 47  				Rocking chair [sc. an outlaw horse]..was a noted fence rower, weaver, and sunfisher. 2005    Edmonton 		(Alberta)	 Jrnl. 		(Nexis)	 10 Nov.  a1  				Riding sunfishers and head hunters in order to scrape up enough money for a new truck. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, January 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  | 
	
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