How To Use Porpoise In A Sentence

  • The dolphin is so uniformly miscalled porpoise, on the west coast and everywhere else, that the creature will soon come to think that it really is a porpoise. Dick in the Everglades
  • Unlike other porpoises and dolphins, belugas are quite leisurely.
  • Less obvious, however, are the deaths from morbilli of wild seals and porpoises in several parts of the world and the equine morbilli in Australia that has not only killed the horses infected, but two of their trainers besides.
  • He pulled away from the F-15, then moved his plane like a porpoise. FLASH POINT
  • While the cod, pollack and haddock may have all but disappeared, you stand a good chance of spotting porpoises, minke whales and even the odd beluga.
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  • Whales, dolphins, porpoises, seals and sea lions receive protection in the U.S. under the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972.
  • Dolphins and porpoises are examples of odontocetes, as are belugas, narwhals, killer whales, sperm whales, and beaked whales.
  • There are seals and porpoises, thick kelp forests, colourful corals, and large wolf fish.
  • Then potential menace turned to pure joy as two more orcas joined the first and together they porpoised toward the setting sun.
  • Complete isolation and frequent sightings of porpoises and minke whales set the scene.
  • Sea lions, harbor seals, sea otters, porpoise and whales are common around the islands.
  • Instead of floating about in graceful attitudes, with the "amber dropping hair" of Milton's Sabrina, they "larked" like a school of porpoises, splashing each other and playing tricks. The Youngest Girl in the Fifth A School Story
  • We'll be catching bonita and dolphin, and spearing porpoises from the bowsprit. Chapter 5
  • The order Sirenia is composed of manatees and dugongs, and the order Cetacea includes whales, dolphins, and porpoises.
  • The release of 195 decibels into this key waterway used by orcas, porpoises, seals, and other marine mammals was followed by an increase in strandings.
  • Many people are of opinion that the porpoise is a variety of the dolphin. The History of Animals
  • Graceful moray eels, deadly great white sharks, playful porpoises, and tiny crabs show up along the way, all to the enchanting tune of Serra's bouncy music score.
  • This," exclaimed he, "if I mistake not, augurs well; the porpoise is a fat, well-conditioned fish, a burgomaster among fishes; his looks betoken ease, plenty, and prosperity; I greatly admire this round fat fish, and doubt not but this is a happy omen of the success of our undertaking. Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 8
  • Frequently the ship was surrounded by bonitoes, moving through the waters much like porpoises; and the seamen got their harpoons ready, to strike any which might come near. The South Sea Whaler
  • But he stuck manfully to a number that were quite as revolutionary—for example, aker for acre, cag for keg, grotesk for grotesque, hainous for heinous, porpess for porpoise and tung for tongue—and they did not begin to disappear until the edition of 1854, issued by other hands and eleven years after his death. Chapter 8. American Spelling. 2. The Influence of Webster
  • Bees and butterflies can see ultraviolet rays, and bats and porpoises can hear sounds two octaves beyond our range.
  • As we porpoise back to shore, I know that I can go deeper.
  • The Cetacea are, of course, best known from their modern representatives, the porpoises, dolphins and whales.
  • Alarms known as pingers that are attached to fishing nets can annoy whales, dolphins and porpoises enough that they swim away to safety.
  • Dusky dolphins and Burmeister's porpoise are considerably more abundant and wide-ranging than the other three species.
  • Dall's porpoises and a minke whale were also seen rapidly moving away from the vessel.
  • California sea lions porpoised through the waves to circle our boats.
  • While the cod, pollack and haddock may have all but disappeared, you stand a good chance of spotting porpoises, minke whales and even the odd beluga.
  • The porpoise is a fish five or six feet in length, weighing from one hundred and fifty to three hundred pounds. Jack in the Forecastle or, Incidents in the Early Life of Hawser Martingale
  • Here are three sorts of sea-turtle, namely hawksbill, loggerhead, and green: but none of them are in any esteem, neither Spaniards nor Portuguese loving them: nay they have a great antipathy against them, and would much rather eat a porpoise, though our English count the green turtle very extraordinary food. A Voyage to New Holland
  • Then potential menace turned to pure joy as two more orcas joined the first and together they porpoised toward the setting sun.
  • The porpoise is the kitten of the sea; he never has a serious thought, he cares for nothing but fun and play. Following the Equator, Part 2
  • When he pulled up too hard on landing and porpoised into a stall the resulting crash hurt like a sock in the mouth.
  • He was a leading merchant at Quebec and was interested in the fishing for "porpoises" or white whales. A Canadian Manor and Its Seigneurs The Story of a Hundred Years, 1761-1861
  • Dolphins, porpoises and even minke whales have all been sighted, while the grey seal colony is always entertaining.
  • The 17 sea mammals on gruesome display included porpoises, white dolphins, common dolphins, aa pilot whale, a beaked whale and a pilot whale.
  • Dolphins and porpoises are examples of odontocetes, as are belugas, narwhals, killer whales, sperm whales, and beaked whales.
  • Suddenly three round-headed porpoises came bursting out of the nearly vertical wavefront immediately behind us.
  • Blake's mathematical models predict that dolphins, killer whales and even some penguins can porpoise.
  • Porpoises, snow-white terns sitting on drifting wood, sea-eagles, ospreys, sea-snakes, sails, the smudge of steamer-smoke and its ten-mile plume, sunlit isles and speckless sky, with no sound save the purring of the engine and the prattle of the water against the bows — a catalogue of the commonplace, and yet stimulative of entertainment and content. Last Leaves from Dunk Island
  • Then the river was full of fish: some went fishing for their livelihood: some for amusement: salmon were plentiful and great fish such as porpoises sometimes found their way above Bridge. The History of London
  • You may spot seals and otters and, if you're lucky, porpoises and killer whales on their way from the Atlantic and to the Irish Sea.
  • The crows nest has become an ideal lookout post for sighting dolphins, whales, porpoises, seabirds and turtles.
  • Dolphins and porpoises are closely related.
  • There are over 80 species of cetaceans, marine mammals such as porpoises, dolphins and whales, but the Norwegians have traditionally hunted minke.
  • If in a series of evolving generations the line of modification proceeding from a terrestrial animal like a cat to semi-aquatic and marine types substantially like an otter and a seal should be carried further, it will inevitably lead to forms possessing characters such as those displayed by whales and the related porpoises, dolphins, and narwhals of the order cetacea. The Doctrine of Evolution Its Basis and Its Scope
  • While it deals mainly with seals it has also rescued dolphins, porpoises, otters, deer, numerous birds and even a Siberian tiger.
  • Orkney folk are being urged to keep a look out for whales, dolphins and porpoises this weekend.
  • There's more money in oysters," the Porpoise remarked dryly. A Raid on the Oyster Pirates
  • The porpoises delight in riding on the bow waves of motor boats, which has frequently proved to be a fatal mistake.
  • Since the IWC doesn't regulate small cetaceans, such as porpoises and dolphins, the international body has no recourse to take to stop the slaughter in Taiji. Sarah Newman: Taiji's Dirty Little Secret is Out
  • Dugongs are one of those sea creatures like porpoises and whales which should be completely protected by law.
  • Fishery managers believe that a few low-decibel pings in the ocean, usually inaudible 300 meters away, have to be better than killing porpoises in Maine or sperm whales in California.
  • Cetaceans also are hunted and eaten, the most common being porpoises, killer whales, and pilot whales.
  • More and more, researchers are finding out just how important sound is to cetaceans like dolphins, porpoises and whales.
  • The shores are playgrounds for otters and seals while porpoises and killer whales sweep past on their way between the Atlantic and the Irish Sea.
  • Strait, and among the mighty icebergs of Baffin's Bay, we saw no cetaceous creatures, save twice some floundering porpoises, and thrice Tales of the Chesapeake
  • A school of porpoises came alongside the boat for a visit.
  • Pingers (acoustic deterrents that warn or scare dolphins, porpoises, and whales away from fishing nets) are mandatory in other areas.
  • She gave him a woodpecker's tongue, arrowheaded and barbed; an ox tongue, muscular, broad, and hung with drool; and, finally, the shy, happy tongue that the porpoise employs to push the waves to shore. Skinny Legs and All
  • It was true that the port-hole might most of the time have been wholly ornamental for all the good it did them, for it was generally splashed with grey October sea, but, at least, as Nancy lucently explained, you could see things -- once there had actually been a porpoise -- and that neither of them, in their present condition, would have worried very much about it if their cabin had been an aquarium was a fact beyond dispute. Young People's Pride
  • Description: The recent likely extinction of the baiji or Chinese river dolphin, makes the vaquita (Phocoena sinus)? the Gulf of California porpoise? the most endangered cetacean. Biodiversity 100: actions for the Americas
  • The ship's black stack would show above the smother, each time emerging gallantly from the tussle with the water rolling from her as it does from the back of a porpoise.
  • We'll be catching bonito and dolphin, and spearing porpoises from the bowsprit. Adventures in Dream Harbor
  • Where Carl learned to swim like a porpoise, we aren't told, but he strikes out in a smooth crawl, out-distancing the pursuing sailor and beats him to a buoy by a mile.
  • 1921-1964 OsW Marine beasties supply ten animalines: cyprine carp 1828 O octopine octopus 1914 delphine dolphin 1828 OsW OW ostracine oyster 1890 delphinine dolphin O OW homarine lobster 1880 phocaenine porpoise OW 1890 OW manatine manatee OW phocine seal 1846 OW megapterine hump - back whale W Finally, beasts of the mind occupy the last three places in my extended corpus: basilicine basilisk 1855 sphinxine sphinx 1845 VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol IV No 1
  • Irish waters are at least seasonally home to an impressive 24 species, ranging from the tiny harbour porpoise to the giant blue whales.
  • An if teh llllama hertz itsek, awn porpoise, is it a self-harmer lllllama? Wrong color - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • Ere I reached the deck, I heard the word "porpoises" uttered in a loud key by one of the sailors, which explained the cause of the excitement. Jack in the Forecastle or, Incidents in the Early Life of Hawser Martingale
  • For example, a fungus called cryptococcus gattii has been implicated in the deaths of dozens of harbor porpoises in the Northwest, he said. KOMO - News - Top Stories
  • This is a peculiarity common to all cetaceans, who have thence received the name of "blowers," alluding to the powerful blast which is necessary to send those majestic columns of water into the air; but it takes a much milder form with the lesser cetaceans, such as dolphins and porpoises. The History of a Mouthful of Bread And its effect on the organization of men and animals
  • Margate and Long Sands in Kent, Red Bay in Northern Ireland and North Norfolk sand banks act as nursery grounds for many commercial fish species such as plaice and sole whilst also supporting sand eel communities that are a food source for seabirds, porpoises and seals. Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph
  • The first day we saw nothing but a harbour porpoise feeding in the current washing around Black Head, close to the end of the Lizard Peninsula.
  • By even a conservative estimate, about 10,000 Dall's porpoise were harpooned each year from 1976 to 1987.
  • Florida, and swept away here as the great ocean river of warm water which we call the Gulf Stream, bringing with it out of the open ocean the shoals of mackerel, and the porpoises and whales which feed upon them. Madam How and Lady Why
  • Also, looking back over a decade of stranding records from Britain, the researchers found seven dolphins and porpoises and one beaked whale with puzzling gas bubbles.
  • thousands of dolphins and porpoises and whales are killed as part of the by-catch each year
  • Dolphins and porpoises are closely related.
  • Tom Finch, the lieutenant in command of the _Porpoise_, who had got his promotion through the death vacancy of his senior at Cape Coast Castle -- he was just ahead of me on the roster, luckily for him -- was one of the jolliest fellows I ever sailed with or under, since I entered the service; and I'm sure I've known a few "swabs" in my time! Tom Finch's Monkey and How he Dined with the Admiral
  • In some fats - e. g., butter - part of the fatty acid is replaced by lower fatty acids - e. g., butyric, or in porpoise oil, by valerianic acid - both occurring as glycerin esters, butyrin, valerin, respectively.
  • With the sun rising higher and splashing across the water, black porpoise dorsals soar and dip alongside the boat.
  • Not far from Malbaie, he saw the so-called "porpoises," or white whales, (beluga, French, _marsouin_) that still disport themselves in great numbers in these waters, come puffing to the surface and writhe their whole length into view like miniature sea-serpents. A Canadian Manor and Its Seigneurs The Story of a Hundred Years, 1761-1861
  • While the cod, pollack and haddock may have all but disappeared, you stand a good chance of spotting porpoises, minke whales and even the odd beluga.
  • I think it more probable that they are driven from the coasts near the river by the numerous enemies they encounter there, such as porpoises and seals, which devour them in great quantities. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 54, No. 333, July 1843
  • Dolphins and porpoises are examples of odontocetes, as are belugas, narwhals, killer whales, sperm whales, and beaked whales.
  • Toothed whales are divided into three groups: the cachalots, the porpoises and the dolphins.
  • Well, anyway, it's a porpoise, and a porpoise is a kind of shark, isn't it? Europe Revised
  • The Dall's porpoise is stocky and muscular, built as powerful as a killer whale, but smaller.
  • So-called porpoise leather is made of the skin of the white whale. Ranching, Sport and Travel
  • The luderick are coming on and off around Munsies Bridge and the Porpoise Wall.
  • The biodiversity report lists 25 species at risk, including otters, brown hares, red squirrels, pipistrelle bats, porpoises, six varieties of dolphin and 13 types of whale.
  • More than 300,000 whales, dolphins and porpoises - or cetaceans - are estimated to die every year from entanglement in fishing gear, more than from any other cause.
  • The ships were going to Wreck Reef off the Barrier Reef to rescue the ship's companies of HMS Porpoise and the merchantman Cato.
  • The porpoise is the true dolphin, the sailor's dolphin being a fish with vertical tail, scales and gills. Ranching, Sport and Travel
  • Dolphins and porpoises are examples of odontocetes, as are belugas, narwhals, killer whales, sperm whales, and beaked whales.
  • A porpoise is a vertical oscillation where you are just a step behind the aircraft and can't physically keep up with the machine; each control movement only serves to exaggerate the problem. Thud Ridge
  • Up until quite recently we had no idea of the numbers and variety of the whales, dolphins and porpoises round our coast.
  • There are also trouts, porpoises, rays, oldwives, mullets, plaice, and very many other sorts of excellent good fish, which we have taken and eaten, whose names I know not but in the country language we have of twelve sorts more the pictures as they were drawn in the country with their names. The Bounty of the Chesapeake Fishing in Colonial Virginia
  • The porpoises delight in riding on the bow waves of motor boats, which has frequently proved to be a fatal mistake.
  • What Nairne calls a porpoise, is really the beluga, a small white whale. A Canadian Manor and Its Seigneurs The Story of a Hundred Years, 1761-1861
  • Seals, porpoises and sometimes even Minke whales also visit this coastline.
  • Only this way will you see if the seat gives you a numb bum in 30 minutes, whether is has enough oomph to do what you need, whether it rides like a dray or wallows like a pregnant porpoise.
  • A medieval act - still in force today - decreed that any whale, dolphin, porpoise or sturgeon washed up on English shores is the property of the monarch. Pollinated Here & There
  • The environmental group claims the deaths off the British coastline are among a worldwide toll of 300,000 cetaceans (dolphins, porpoises and whales) worldwide every year.
  • But dolphins have a dark secret - their nasty habit of ganging up on porpoises and headbutting them to death.
  • Porpoises don't often go in for the spectacular aquabatics of dolphins. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although flying fish leap out of the water they do not porpoise but glide, using their pectoral fins as aerodynamic surfaces.
  • Anyone who has seen film of the Moray Firth dolphins beating up harbour porpoises will also be aware that we humans, by comparison with porpoises, are as agile in the sea and as well able to defend ourselves as a slug on a carpet. [dolphins] see them in context
  • The mermaids, dear creatures, had to be escorted home, but they felt safe, for their mermen brothers and daddies were so fierce that, except sharks, even the larger fish, such as porpoises and dolphins were afraid to come near them. Dutch Fairy Tales for Young Folks
  • He pulled away from the F-15, then moved his plane like a porpoise. FLASH POINT
  • His researches cover tortoises and lizards, crocodiles and vipers, porpoises and whales.
  • The porpoises delight in riding on the bow waves of motor boats, which has frequently proved to be a fatal mistake.
  • It was porpoises, breaching and rolling as they trailed the tug in hope of picking off fish addled by the prop churn.

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