fish

[fish] /fɪʃ/
noun, plural (especially collectively) fish (especially referring to two or more kinds or species) fishes.
1.
any of various cold-blooded, aquatic vertebrates, having gills, commonly fins, and typically an elongated body covered with scales.
2.
(loosely) any of various other aquatic animals.
3.
the flesh of fishes used as food.
4.
Fishes, Astronomy, Astrology. the constellation or sign of Pisces.
5.
Informal. a person:
an odd fish; a poor fish.
6.
a long strip of wood, iron, etc., used to strengthen a mast, joint, etc.
7.
Cards Slang. an incompetent player whose incompetence can be exploited.
8.
Slang. a dollar:
He sold the car for 500 fish.
9.
Slang. a new prison inmate.
verb (used with object)
10.
to catch or attempt to catch (any species of fish or the like).
11.
to try to catch fish in (a stream, lake, etc.):
Let's fish the creek.
12.
to draw, as by fishing (often followed by up or out):
He fished a coin out of his pocket for the boy.
13.
to search through, as by fishing.
14.
Nautical.
  1. to secure (an anchor) by raising the flukes.
  2. to reinforce (a mast or other spar) by fastening a spar, batten, metal bar, or the like, lengthwise over a weak place.
verb (used without object)
15.
to catch or attempt to catch fish, as by angling or drawing a net.
16.
to search carefully:
He fished through all his pockets but his wallet was gone.
17.
to seek to obtain something indirectly or by artifice:
to fish for compliments; to fish for information.
18.
to search for or attempt to catch onto something under water, in mud, etc., by the use of a dredge, rake, hook, or the like.
19.
to attempt to recover detached tools or other loose objects from an oil or gas well.
Verb phrases
20.
fish out, to deplete (a lake, stream, etc.) of fish by fishing.
Idioms
21.
drink like a fish, to drink alcoholic beverages to excess:
Nobody invites him out because he drinks like a fish.
22.
fish in troubled waters, to take advantage of troubled or uncertain conditions for personal profit.
23.
fish or cut bait, to choose a definite course of action, especially to decide whether to participate in or retreat from an activity.
24.
fish out of water, a person out of his or her proper or accustomed environment:
He felt like a fish out of water in an academic atmosphere.
25.
neither fish nor fowl, having no specific character or conviction; neither one nor the other.
26.
other fish to fry, other matters requiring attention:
When it was time to act, they had other fish to fry.
Origin of fish
before 900; (noun) Middle English fis(c)h, fyssh, Old English fisc; cognate with Dutch vis, German Fisch, Old Norse fiskr, Gothic fisks; akin to Latin piscis, Irish iasc; (v.) Middle English fishen, Old English fiscian, cognate with Dutch visschen, German fischen, Old Norse fiska, Gothic fiskôn
Related forms
fishless, adjective
fishlike, adjective
outfish, verb (used with object)
unfished, adjective
Can be confused
fiche, fish.
British Dictionary definitions for drink like a fish

fish

/fɪʃ/
noun (pl) fish, fishes
1.
  1. any of a large group of cold-blooded aquatic vertebrates having jaws, gills, and usually fins and a skin covered in scales: includes the sharks and rays (class Chondrichthyes: cartilaginous fishes) and the teleosts, lungfish, etc (class Osteichthyes: bony fishes)
  2. (in combination): fishpond, related adjectives ichthyic ichthyoid piscine
2.
any of various similar but jawless vertebrates, such as the hagfish and lamprey
3.
(not in technical use) any of various aquatic invertebrates, such as the cuttlefish, jellyfish, and crayfish
4.
the flesh of fish used as food
5.
(informal) a person of little emotion or intelligence: a poor fish
6.
short for fishplate
7.
Also called tin fish an informal word for torpedo (sense 1)
8.
a fine kettle of fish, an awkward situation; mess
9.
drink like a fish, to drink (esp alcohol) to excess
10.
have other fish to fry, to have other activities to do, esp more important ones
11.
like a fish out of water, out of one's usual place
12.
(Irish) make fish of one and flesh of another, to discriminate unfairly between people
13.
neither fish, flesh, nor fowl, neither this nor that
verb
14.
(intransitive) to attempt to catch fish, as with a line and hook or with nets, traps, etc
15.
(transitive) to fish in (a particular area of water)
16.
to search (a body of water) for something or to search for something, esp in a body of water
17.
(intransitive) foll by for. to seek something indirectly: to fish for compliments
See also fish out
Derived Forms
fishable, adjective
fishlike, adjective
Word Origin
Old English fisc; related to Old Norse fiskr, Gothic fiscs, Russian piskar, Latin piscis

FISH

/fɪʃ/
noun acronym
1.
fluorescence in situ hybridization, a technique for detecting and locating gene mutations and chromosome abnormalities
Word Origin and History for drink like a fish

fish

n.

Old English fisc, from Proto-Germanic *fiskaz (cf. Old Saxon, Old Frisian, Old High German fisc, Old Norse fiskr, Middle Dutch visc, Dutch vis, German Fisch, Gothic fisks), from PIE *peisk- "fish" (cf. Latin piscis, Irish iasc, and, via Latin, Italian pesce, French poisson, Spanish pez, Welsh pysgodyn, Breton pesk).

Fish story attested from 1819, from the tendency to exaggerate the size of the catch (or the one that got away). Figurative sense of fish out of water first recorded 1610s.

v.

Old English fiscian (cf. Old Norse fiska, Old High German fiscon, German fischen, Gothic fiskon), from the root of fish (n.). Related: Fished; fishing.

drink like a fish in Science
fish
  (fĭsh)   

Plural fish or fishes
Any of numerous cold-blooded vertebrate animals that live in water. Fish have gills for obtaining oxygen, a lateral line for sensing pressure changes in the water, and a vertical tail. Most fish are covered with scales and have limbs in the form of fins. Fish were once classified together as a single group, but are now known to compose numerous evolutionarily distinct classes, including the bony fish, cartilaginous fish, jawless fish, lobe-finned fish, and placoderms.
Slang definitions & phrases for drink like a fish

drink like a fish

verb phrase

To drink too much; overindulge in alcohol; booze, hit the bottle (1747+)


fish

noun
  1. A new inmate: As a ''fish'' at Charlestown, I was physically miserable (1870s+ Prison)
  2. A nonmember of a street gang; a person regarded as inimical and distasteful by a street gang (1950s+ Street gang)
  3. A weak or stupid person, esp one easily victimized; patsy, sucker: Why should he be the fish for the big guys?/ The superteams get stronger. They can pad their schedules with the occasional fish (1753+)
  4. A person, esp a criminal, thought of as being caught like a fish: The cops catch a lot of very interesting fish (1885+)
  5. A heterosexual woman (1970s+ Homosexuals)
  6. A prostitute; hooker •Fish meant ''vulva'' by the 1890s and retained the meaning, at least in black English, until at least the 1930s (1930s+)
  7. A dollar: The job paid only fifty fish (1920+)
  8. tin fish •Fish torpedo is found by 1876 (1928+)
verb
  1. To seek information, esp by a legal or quasi-legal process having a very general aim; go fishing (1563+)
  2. To ask for something, usually a compliment, esp in an indirect and apparently modest way (1803+)
Related Terms

big fish, bigger fish to fry, cold fish, fine kettle of fish, go fishing, kettle of fish, like shooting fish in a barrel, poor fish, queer fish, tin fish


Related Abbreviations for drink like a fish

FISH

first in, still here
drink like a fish in the Bible

called _dag_ by the Hebrews, a word denoting great fecundity (Gen. 9:2; Num. 11:22; Jonah 2:1, 10). No fish is mentioned by name either in the Old or in the New Testament. Fish abounded in the Mediterranean and in the lakes of the Jordan, so that the Hebrews were no doubt acquainted with many species. Two of the villages on the shores of the Sea of Galilee derived their names from their fisheries, Bethsaida (the "house of fish") on the east and on the west. There is probably no other sheet of water in the world of equal dimensions that contains such a variety and profusion of fish. About thirty-seven different kinds have been found. Some of the fishes are of a European type, such as the roach, the barbel, and the blenny; others are markedly African and tropical, such as the eel-like silurus. There was a regular fish-market apparently in Jerusalem (2 Chr. 33:14; Neh. 3:3; 12:39; Zeph. 1:10), as there was a fish-gate which was probably contiguous to it. Sidon is the oldest fishing establishment known in history.

Idioms and Phrases with drink like a fish

drink like a fish

Consume large amounts of alcoholic beverages, as in He always drinks like a fish at holiday dinners. The expression, first recorded in the mid-1600s, alludes to the way fish obtain oxygen, which causes them to be open-mouthed and appear to be constantly drinking.