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/ English Dictionary

REQUIEM SHARK

Pronunciation (US): Play  (GB): Play

 I. (noun) 

Sense 1

Meaning:

Any of numerous sharks from small relatively harmless bottom-dwellers to large dangerous oceanic and coastal speciesplay

Classified under:

Nouns denoting animals

Hypernyms ("requiem shark" is a kind of...):

shark (any of numerous elongate mostly marine carnivorous fishes with heterocercal caudal fins and tough skin covered with small toothlike scales)

Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "requiem shark"):

bull shark; Carcharhinus leucas; cub shark (a most common shark in temperate and tropical coastal waters worldwide; heavy-bodied and dangerous)

Carcharhinus plumbeus; sandbar shark (most common grey shark along coasts of middle Atlantic states; sluggish and occasionally caught by fishermen)

blacktip shark; Carcharhinus limbatus; sandbar shark (widely distributed shallow-water shark with fins seemingly dipped in ink)

Carcharinus longimanus; oceanic whitetip shark; white-tipped shark; whitetip shark (large deep-water shark with white-tipped dorsal fin; worldwide distribution; most dangerous shark)

Carcharhinus obscurus; dusky shark (relatively slender blue-grey shark; nearly worldwide in tropical and temperate waters)

lemon shark; Negaprion brevirostris (common shallow-water schooling shark of the Atlantic from North Carolina to Brazil and off west Africa; dangerous)

blue shark; great blue shark; Prionace glauca (slender cosmopolitan, pelagic shark; blue body shades to white belly; dangerous especially during maritime disasters)

Galeocerdo cuvieri; tiger shark (large dangerous warm-water shark with striped or spotted body)

Galeorhinus zyopterus; soup-fin; soupfin; soupfin shark (Pacific shark valued for its fins (used by Chinese in soup) and liver (rich in vitamin A))

Holonyms ("requiem shark" is a member of...):

Carcharhinidae; family Carcharhinidae (largest family of living sharks; found worldwide especially in tropical waters; dorsal fin lacks spines: requiem sharks including tiger sharks and soupfin sharks)

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