- Arctic white whale - Which species of whale has a long tusk? - An arctic cetacean (Monodon monocerous), about twenty feet
long. The male usually has one long, twisted, pointed canine tooth, or
tusk projecting forward from the upper jaw like a horn, whence it is
called also sea unicorn, unicorn fish, and unicorn whale. Sometimes two
horns are developed, side by side.
- Fatal (disease) - Murderer - One who deprives of life; one who, or that which, kills. - A voracious, toothed whale of the genus Orca, of which
several species are known.
- Male bovine animal - Male elephant - Male walrus - Papal decree - Zodiac symbol - The male of any species of cattle (Bovidae); hence, the male
of any large quadruped, as the elephant; also, the male of the whale. - One who, or that which, resembles a bull in character or
action.
- A small kind of whale, of the genus Globicephalus, of
several species. The most common is G. melas. Also sometimes applied to
other whales of larger size. - The tautog of New England (Tautoga). - The black sea bass (Centropristis atrarius) of the
Atlantic coast. It is excellent food fish; -- locally called also black
Harry. - A fish of southern Europe (Centrolophus pompilus) of the
Mackerel family. - The female salmon in the spawning season.
- A genus of naked pteropods. One species (Clione
papilonacea), abundant in the Arctic Ocean, constitutes a part of the
food of the Greenland whale. It is sometimes incorrectly called Clio.
- A crooked back; a humped back. - A humpbacked person; a hunchback. - Any whale of the genus Megaptera, characterized by a hump
or bunch on the back. Several species are known. The most common ones
in the North Atlantic are Megaptera longimana of Europe, and M. osphyia
of America; that of the California coasts is M. versabilis. - A small salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha), of the northwest
coast of America.