: any of numerous voracious elongate snakelike bony fishes (order Anguilliformes) that have a smooth slimy skin, lack pelvic fins, and have the median fins confluent around the tail compare american eel
b
: any of numerous other elongate fishes (as of the order Synbranchiformes)
2
: any of various nematodes (such as the vinegar eel)
: to move or make (one's way) sinuously or insidiously : worm
Stories my Russian friends had told me about the hundreds who were trampled at Stalin's funeral came back to me. Finally, we gave up and eeled our way out of there.—Ian Frazier
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There are more than 500 fish species known as eels. They are slender, elongated, and usually scaleless, with long dorsal and anal fi ns that are continuous around the tail tip. Eels are found in all seas, from coastal regions to the mid-depths. Freshwater eels are active, predatory fish with small embedded scales. They grow to maturity in freshwater and return to the sea, where they spawn and die. The transparent young drift to the coast and make their way upstream. Freshwater eels, considered valuable food fish, include species ranging from 4 in (10 cm) to about 111⁄2 ft (3.5 m) long.
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Noun
Share [Findings] Electric eel discharge transforms the DNA of zebrafish larvae.—Rafil Kroll-Zaidi, Harper's Magazine, 22 Jan. 2025 Home to delightful wildlife like manatees, sea turtles and … invasive Asian swamp eels?!—Kathryn Varn, Axios, 13 Jan. 2025
Verb
See also: eel ‘The Theory of the Leisure Class’ by Thorstein Veblen
Thorstein Veblen’s 1899 magnum opus, The Theory of the Leisure Class, could be considered a forerunner of the behavioral economics so popular now.—The Editors, Robb Report, 28 Mar. 2024 With his brother-in-law as president, Mr. Saint-Rémy wielded enormous influence, often demanding that choice licenses and contracts be awarded to him, particularly eel export licenses, according to officials in Mr. Martelly’s government.—New York Times, 12 Dec. 2021 See all Example Sentences for eel
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English ele, from Old English ǣl; akin to Old High German āl eel
First Known Use
Noun
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
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