sea lamprey
— Noun
– English
~ large anadromous lamprey sometimes used as food; destructive of native fish fauna in the Great Lakes
sea robin
— Noun
– English
~ American gurnard; mostly found in bays and estuaries
sea scallop
— Noun
– English
~ muscle of large deep-water scallops
sea holm
— Noun
– English
~ European evergreen eryngo with twisted spiny leaves naturalized on United States east coast; roots formerly used as an aphrodisiac
sea room
— Noun
– English
~ space for maneuver at sea
sea animal
— Noun
– English
~ any of numerous animals inhabiting the sea including e.g. fishes and molluscs and many mammals
sea poacher
— Noun
– English
~ small slender fish (to 8 inches) with body covered by bony plates; chiefly of deeper northern Pacific waters
sea mew
— Noun
– English
~ the common gull of Eurasia and northeastern North America
sea-rocket
— Noun
– English
~ salt-tolerant seashore annual grown for its fragrant rose or violet flowers and fleshy grey-green foliage
sea-ear
— Noun
– English
~ an abalone found near the Channel Islands
sea anemone
— Noun
– English
~ marine polyps that resemble flowers but have oral rings of tentacles; differ from corals in forming no hard skeleton
sea eryngium
— Noun
– English
~ European evergreen eryngo with twisted spiny leaves naturalized on United States east coast; roots formerly used as an aphrodisiac
sea cucumber
— Noun
– English
~ echinoderm having a flexible sausage-shaped body, tentacles surrounding the mouth and tube feet; free-living mud feeders
sea milkwort
— Noun
– English
~ a small fleshy herb common along North American seashores and in brackish marshes having pink or white flowers
sea catfish
— Noun
– English
~ any of numerous marine fishes most of which are mouthbreeders; not used for food
sea lettuce
— Noun
– English
~ seaweed with edible translucent crinkly green fronds
sea ladder
— Noun
– English
~ (nautical) ladder to be lowered over a ship's side for coming aboard
sea moss
— Noun
– English
~ any of various red algae having graceful rose to purple fronds (e.g. dulse or carrageen)