Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
bloater .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word bloaters.
Examples
-
Whatever happened to the pink puffers and blue bloaters as described by Fletcher and Peto in the 1970s and taught to students and pulmonary fellows in that era?
Archive 2009-01-01 james gaulte 2009
-
Whatever happened to the pink puffers and blue bloaters as described by Fletcher and Peto in the 1970s and taught to students and pulmonary fellows in that era?
COPD-Should we consider it one disease ? james gaulte 2009
-
If the Discovery Service wished to have seafood, Goldner had offered to provide canned lobsters in the shell, cod, West Indian turtle, salmon steaks, and Yarmouth bloaters.
The Terror Simmons, Dan 2007
-
Emperor Charles V is said to have erected a statue to the inventor of bloaters, but that is the only case I can think of at the moment.
-
They'd been shown floaters and bloaters and human forms reduced to something more akin to melted raspberry ripple.
Resurrection Men Rankin, Ian, 1960- 2002
-
"But where's the herrings -- the Yarmouth bloaters, you know?" asked Ben.
Little Folks (Septemeber 1884) A Magazine for the Young Various
-
When that room's full of herrings all hanging in rows -- thousands and thousands o 'fish -- a fire of oak chips and logs is lighted on the floor, and the smoke going all among the herrings, and only by degrees getting out of the hole in the roof, the fish are smoked; and them that's salted first is red herrings, and them that's only just touched dry with the smoke like are bloaters.
Little Folks (Septemeber 1884) A Magazine for the Young Various
-
It's in the winter you see the herring-smacks come in at the herring-wharf over yonder, and hundreds of baskets full of the shining fellows brought ashore and sold, and sent off fresh in no time; while others are kept here to turn into bloaters, or red herrings, or kippers.
Little Folks (Septemeber 1884) A Magazine for the Young Various
-
I may add, that the mess table in the gunroom at breakfast clearly demonstrated our proximity to this very hospitable port, by the lavish abundance of milk and eggs, not to speak of bloaters and marmalade, so that even Tom Mills was satisfied.
Crown and Anchor Under the Pen'ant John B. [Illustrator] Greene
-
Fish is too expensive for most of them, except fried kippers or bloaters.
Dutch Life in Town and Country P. M. Hough
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.