mackerel
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmækɹəl/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ækɹəl
- Hyphenation: mack‧e‧rel
Etymology 1
From Middle English mackerell, macrell, macrelle, makarell, makerel, makerell, makerelle, makrel, makrell, makyrelle, from Old French maquerel. Further origin unknown.
Noun
mackerel (countable and uncountable, plural mackerel or mackerels)
- Certain smaller edible fish, principally true mackerel and Spanish mackerel in family Scombridae, often speckled,
- typically Scomber scombrus in the British isles.
- c. 1597 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The First Part of Henry the Fourth, […]”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, [Act II, scene iv]:
- […] you may buy land now as cheap as stinking mackerel.
- 1704, [Jonathan Swift], A Tale of a Tub. […], London: […] John Nutt, […], OCLC 752990886, page 215:
- I am living fast, to see the Time, when a Book that misses its Tide, shall be neglected, as the Moon by Day, or like Mackarel a Week after the Season.
- 1913, Joseph C. Lincoln, chapter 8, in Mr. Pratt's Patients:
- Philander went into the next room […] and came back with a salt mackerel that dripped brine like a rainstorm. Then he put the coffee pot on the stove and rummaged out a loaf of dry bread and some hardtack.
- 1926, Hope Mirrlees, Lud-in-the-Mist, London: Millennium, 2000, Chapter 6, p. 68,
- He sometimes pinches the maids till their arms are as many colours as a mackerel’s back.
- 1982, Audre Lorde, Zami: A New Spelling of My Name, Chapter 5, in Zami; Sister Outsider; Undersong, New York: Quality Paperback Book Club, 1993, p. 47,
- “ […] if you ever so much as breathe a word about my stories, Sandman’s comin’ after you the very same minute to pluck out you eyes like a mackerel for soup.”
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- typically Scomber scombrus in the British isles.
- A true mackerel, any fish of tribe Scombrini (Scomber spp., Rastrelliger spp.)
- Certain other similar small fish in families Carangidae, Gempylidae, and Hexagrammidae.
Hyponyms
- (small fish in Scombridae): Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus), cero mackerel (Scomberomorus regalis), chub mackerel (Scomber japonicus), common mackerel (Scomber scombrus), double-lined mackerel (Grammatorcynus bilineatus), king mackerel (Scomberomorus cavalla), Spanish mackerel (Scomberomorini)
Derived terms
- Atka mackerel (Pleurogrammus spp.)
- butterfly mackerel (Gasterochisma melampus)
- cold as a mackerel
- dead as a mackerel
- holy mackerel
- horse mackerel
- jack mackerel (Trachurus spp.)
- mackerel bird (Jynx torquilla)
- mackerel breeze
- mackerel cock (Puffinus puffinus)
- mackereler
- mackerel gale
- mackerel gull (Sterninae)
- mackerel icefish (Champsocephalus gunnari)
- mackerelled
- mackerelling
- mackerelly
- mackerel midge (Gadidae spp.)
- mackerel-pike (Scomberesocidae)
- mackerel scad (Decapterus macarellus)
- mackerel shad (Decapterus spp.)
- mackerel shark (Lamniformes)
- mackerel sky
- mackerel snapper
- mackerel tuna (Euthynnus alletteratus)
- snake mackerel (Gempylus serpens, Gempylidae spp.)
- stink like a mackerel
- throw a sprat to catch a mackerel
- tinker mackerel
- yellow mackerel (Caranx crysos)
Translations
edible fish
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References
mackerel on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Scombridae on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
Scombridae on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
Etymology 2
From Middle English makerel, maquerel, from Old French maquerel, from Middle Dutch makelare, makelaer (“broker”) (> makelaar (“broker, peddler”)). See also French maquereau.
Noun
mackerel (plural mackerels)
- (obsolete) A pimp; also, a bawd.
- 1483, William Caxton, Magnus Cato, quoted in James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps, A Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, Obsolete Phrases, Proverbs and Ancient Customs, from the Fourteenth Century, vol. 2, publ. by John Russell Smith (1847), page 536.
- […] nyghe his hows dwellyd a maquerel or bawde […]
- 1980, The Police Journal, Volume 53 (page 257) doi:10.1177/0032258X8005300305 (also available at Google books)
- NETTING MACKEREL: THE PIMP DETAIL
- 1981, Peter Gammond, Raymond Horricks, Big Bands, page 15:
- Hundreds of ‘night birds’ and their ‘mackerels’ and other vice-pushers were sent packing.
- 2006, Paul Crowley, Message-ID: <ciGug.11527$j7.319767@news.indigo.ie> in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
- A procurer or a pimp is a broker (or broker-between), a mackerel, or a pandar; the last is not necessarily-and, indeed, not usually-a professional.
- 1483, William Caxton, Magnus Cato, quoted in James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps, A Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, Obsolete Phrases, Proverbs and Ancient Customs, from the Fourteenth Century, vol. 2, publ. by John Russell Smith (1847), page 536.
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