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langouste

NOUN
  1. large edible marine crustacean having a spiny carapace but lacking the large pincers of true lobsters
  2. warm-water lobsters without claws; those from Australia and South Africa usually marketed as frozen tails; caught also in Florida and California

How To Use langouste In A Sentence

  • We rowed back to the little inn at Ploumanach, and had some eggs and a hot langouste or rock-lobster. Brittany & Its Byways
  • Master and angry under, big langouste a place of strategic importance arrives in his bed.
  • Provence_ and _langouste_ and Chabas's famous straw potatoes and rum omelette for ten days, and were sorry when it was all over. The Automobilist Abroad
  • Master and angry under, big langouste a place of strategic importance arrives in his bed.
  • Astrid was clearly making an effort to look cheerful, but I could tell she was distraught, and even I felt a little guilty at the thought of poor Łukasz, who had been nice to me, languishing in some Communist jail cell while we feasted on langouste and oysters. Dreaming in French
  • Today we do not have live spiny lobsters (langouste) in great abundance.
  • Over there, in the Caribbean, all langoustes are nationalised; they have to be sold to tourists for currency.
  • It was curious to see the dread shown by the common lobster to the langouste. Brittany & Its Byways
  • The best were the langoustes (Palinurus vulgaris), the clawless lobsters called crawfish (crayfish) in the United States, and the agosta or avagosta of the Adriatic: it was confounded by the The Land of Midian
  • The descriptions of the lobster and the langouste are particularly minute, and the comparison or contrast between the two is drawn with elaborate precision. The Legacy of Greece Essays By: Gilbert Murray, W. R. Inge, J. Burnet, Sir T. L. Heath, D'arcy W. Thompson, Charles Singer, R. W. Livingston, A. Toynbee, A. E. Zimmern, Percy Gardner, Sir Reginald Blomfield
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