LING vs MOLVA MOLVA: NOUN
- American hakes
- Water chestnut whose spiny fruit has two rather than 4 prongs
- Common Old World heath represented by many varieties; low evergreen grown widely in the northern hemisphere
- Elongate freshwater cod of northern Europe and Asia and North America having barbels around its mouth
- Any of various marine food fishes closely related to and resembling the cod, especially Molva molva of northern Atlantic waters, having a long body and a barbel on the chin.
- Common heather, Calluna vulgaris.
- An adverbial suffix, forming adverbs from nouns, as in backling, darkling, groveling, headling, sideling, halfling, etc.
- A European gadoid fish, Molva molva or M. vulgaris (called by Cuvier Lota molva).
- An American gadoid fish, Lota maculosa, better known as the burbot, and also called lawyer and lake-lawyer.
- A chiroid fish, Ophiodon elongatus, better known as cultus-cod.
- Same as bay-cod.
- Same as conger-eel, 3.
- A termination having usually a diminutive or depreciative force, occurring in designations of persons, as darling, earthling, gadling, gadling, groundling, hireling, lordling, stripling, underling, worldling, etc., or of young animals, etc., as duckling, gosling, kidling, kitling, starling, firstling, nestling, yearling, etc.
- Same as beardy, 3.
- The water-chestnut of China, Trapa bicornis, largely used in China for food.
- Heather (Calluna vulgaris).
- A sort of wild honey, made from the flowers of the heather.
- A large, marine, gadoid fish (Molva vulgaris) of Northern Europe and Greenland. It is valued as a food fish and is largely salted and dried. Called also drizzle.
- The burbot of Lake Ontario.
- An American hake of the genus Phycis.
- A New Zealand food fish of the genus Genypterus. The name is also locally applied to other fishes, as the cultus cod, the mutton fish, and the cobia.
- Any of various marine food fish, of the genus Molva resembling the cod.
- Short for common ling, Molva molva.
- Any of various varieties of heather or broom.
- Elongated marine food fish of Greenland and northern Europe; often salted and dried
- Elongated marine food fish of Greenland and northern Europe; often salted and dried
LING vs MOLVA MOLVA: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Often salted and dried
- Often salted and dried
LING vs MOLVA MOLVA: RELATED WORDS
- Shan, Lin, Ning, Ting, Trapa bicornis, Scots heather, Molva molva, Lota lota, Ling ko, Calluna vulgaris, Broom, Heather, Eelpout, Cusk, Burbot
- Calluna, Genus molva, Ling
LING vs MOLVA MOLVA: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Codfish, Wong, Sau, Fong, Sui, Ying, Shan, Lin, Ning, Ting, Broom, Heather, Eelpout, Cusk, Burbot
- Calluna, Ling
LING vs MOLVA MOLVA: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Watch Queue Queue Ling Ling is the king of music.
- Rclcphonc: ___________________________________________________Cmail: ______________________________________________________Spon ufb01 ling, a copy od this ufb01 ling will bc availablc at www.
- Ling Ling Chan for misuse of funds and lack of accountability.
- On the third floor, you will find The Ling Ling Club.
- Ling lamba karne ke tarike Ling ki lambayee or choudayee ko lekar kayi purusho mein heen bhavana hoti hai.
- If Ling Xing said this to Ling Xiao, no one would think anything of it.
- Venture downstairs to the Ling Ling Club, which is smaller and features local DJs.
- Ling Mengchu was born into the Ling clan of Wucheng in northern Zhejiang.
- The Wind Kung Fu Girl, Ling Ling is a beneficial blocking machine!
- Is Ling Ling or dark magic witch better now?
- N/A
LING vs MOLVA MOLVA: QUESTIONS
- Did Lin Chi-ling undergo surgery at Taipei hospital?
- What is Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche doing at Karme Ling?
- Where is the Ling siding industrial hub in Tasmania?
- What makes Ling Long different from other restaurants?
- When was Ling Yuet sin cannossian kindergarten built?
- When was the Ngamring Jampa Ling monastery rebuilt?
- Is Ling from Fullmetal Alchemist a cameo appearance?
- What are the symptoms of Tse Tse Ling-Ling disease?
- Did ng Ling Ling take credit for setting up training institute?
- What happened to Ling-Ling and Ni-Pul's relationship?
- N/A