English to Marathi Dictionary gill

gill

प्रवाह
definition
verb
Immediately after this, gut and gill all fish you wish to eat.
gut or clean (a fish).
catch (a fish) in a gill net.
noun
Some others, like the Siamese fighting fish, are capable of breathing air in addition to extracting oxygen from the water with their gills .
the paired respiratory organ of fishes and some amphibians, by which oxygen is extracted from water flowing over surfaces within or attached to the walls of the pharynx.
An agaric, such as the common field mushroom, has gills in the form of fine, radiating ‘plates’.
the vertical plates arranged radially on the underside of mushrooms and many toadstools.
translation of 'gill'
वृक्षाच्छादित दरी,
एक चतुर्थांश पॉइंटचे माप,
माशांचे श्वसनेंद्रिय,
प्रवाह
example
A tot is a sixth, a fifth, a quarter or a third of a 'gill' of whisky.
At school we had a free 'gill' of milk each morning break as part of the government's plan to build a nation of healthy young things.
Rustic enough that the notice over the bar still claimed to serve spirits in measures of 1/6 'gill' .
Her cheese pudding has an ounce and a half of breadcrumbs, an ounce of cheese, one 'gill' of milk and half an egg.
It's lovely, you sort of follow a 'gill' that has alders like the River Cover, but almost different trees, small and gnarled and ancient looking.
Immediately after this, gut and 'gill' all fish you wish to eat.
White-tailed eagles, which inhabit the same territory, may struggle for hours merely to pry an opening around a fish's 'gills' or front fin.
He squatted next to her and ran his fingers gently along the 'gills' of one of the large mushrooms.
Agaricus indicates a mushroom with 'gills' , and bisporus refers to this variety's self-sufficiently needing no second mushroom to make little mushrooms.
Some others, like the Siamese fighting fish, are capable of breathing air in addition to extracting oxygen from the water with their 'gills' .
Fish, for example, pump water across their 'gills' with their head muscles.
Barracuda often pump their jaws in order to move water past their 'gills' .
An agaric, such as the common field mushroom, has 'gills' in the form of fine, radiating ‘plates’.
From the early 10th cent. there was considerable Norse settlement, from Ireland and the Isle of Man, leaving evidence in words like fell, 'ghyll' , tarn, and how.
Cold, foamy water hushed over the rocks, and the 'gills' of the fishes that swam in it caressed the rocks.
The sets of weights were once the work tools of the county's pound police where they were used to measure the pounds, ounces, quarters and 'gills' of an untold number of items.
Fish start to suffocate out of water and their 'gills' may collapse and bleed.
In fishes and some amphibians, the slits bear 'gills' and are used for gas exchange.
In fishes there is equivalent ‘ventilation’ of the 'gills' with water.
A man who failed to return home from a walk in the Helvellyn area spent the night under a bush in a 'ghyll' as 32 rescuers from three areas searched the entire range for him.
They are quite unlike the radiating ribs of ordinary mushrooms, but serve the same function, i.e. they constitute the 'gills' on which the spores are carried.
These fish do not have 'gills' or opercula (gill coverings) like most bony fishes.
A small whole bass of anything up to about four pounds gets scaled when caught, 'gilled' and gutted.
A female ferret is called a 'jill' while a male is called a hob.
At fish-cleaning stations, cleaner fish nibble the parasites from the 'gills' and mouths of fishes much larger than they are.
In fish, the branchial apparatus forms a system of 'gills' for exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide between the blood and the water.
Apparently squirting fresh water into the 'gills' gets them off.
Fish are subject to a variety of maladies, such as grubs or worms, which may be found in or on the skin, attached to 'gills' , or embedded in the flesh.
Before they put fillet knives in front of American anglers, most of us gutted, 'gilled' and scaled all of our fish.
When in the water, they breathe with their 'gills' as most fish do.
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