salmon
[ sam-uh n ]
/ ˈsæm ən /
noun, plural salm·ons, (especially collectively) salm·on for 1–3.
a marine and freshwater food fish, Salmo salar, of the family Salmonidae, having pink flesh, inhabiting waters off the North Atlantic coasts of Europe and North America near the mouths of large rivers, which it enters to spawn.
any of several salmonoid food fishes of the genus Oncorhynchus, inhabiting the North Pacific.
a light yellowish-pink.
adjective
of the color salmon.
Origin of salmon
1200–50; Middle English
salmoun, samoun < Anglo-French (Old French
saumon) < Latin
salmōn-, stem of
salmō
OTHER WORDS FROM salmon
salm·on·like, adjectiveWords nearby salmon
Example sentences from the Web for salmon
British Dictionary definitions for salmon
salmon
/ (ˈsæmən) /
noun plural -ons or -on
any soft-finned fish of the family Salmonidae, esp Salmo salar of the Atlantic and Oncorhynchus species (sockeye, Chinook, etc) of the Pacific, which are important food fishes. They occur in cold and temperate waters and many species migrate to fresh water to spawn
Australian
any of several unrelated fish, esp the Australian salmon
short for salmon pink
Word Origin for salmon
C13: from Old French
saumon, from Latin
salmō; related to Late Latin
salar trout