Trout

Etymology
From truht:, in part from  truite:, from  tructa:, perhaps from  τρώκτης:, from τρώγω:, from. The Internet verb sense originated on BBSes of the 1980s, probably from Monty Python's The Fish-Slapping Dance (1972), though that sketch involved a halibut.

Noun

 * 1) Any of several species of fish in Salmonidae, closely related to salmon, and distinguished by spawning more than once.
 * Many anglers consider trout to be the archetypical quarry.
 * 1)  An elderly woman of dubious sensibilities.
 * Look, you silly old trout; you can't keep bringing home cats! You can't afford the ones you have!

Derived terms

 * brown trout
 * rainbow trout
 * salmon trout
 * Sevan trout

Translations

 * Albanian: troftë
 * Armenian: ,
 * Bosnian:
 * Breton: dluzh
 * Catalan: truita
 * Croatian:
 * Czech:
 * Danish:
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto:
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German:
 * Greenlandic:
 * Hungarian:
 * Icelandic:
 * Ido:
 * Interlingua: tructa
 * Irish:
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: 鱒 (マス, masu)


 * Latvian: forele
 * Macedonian:
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: ,
 * Nynorsk:
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian: păstrăv
 * Romansch: litgiva
 * Russian:
 * Scottish Gaelic:
 * Serbian:
 * Cyrillic:
 * Roman:
 * Slovene:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: forell
 * Turkish: alabalık
 * Ukrainian:
 * Welsh: brithyll
 * West Frisian: forel

Verb

 * 1)  To (figuratively) slap someone with a slimy, stinky, wet trout; to admonish jocularly.

Anagrams

 * tutor

trout trout trout trout trout fa:trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout trout