Online Google Dictionary

gill 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/gil/,
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gills, plural;
  1. Gut or clean (a fish)

  2. Catch (a fish) in a gill net

Noun
  1. A young woman; a sweetheart

  2. A female ferret


  1. a British imperial capacity unit (liquid or dry) equal to 5 fluid ounces or 142.066 cubic centimeters
  2. a United States liquid unit equal to 4 fluid ounces
  3. any of the radiating leaflike spore-producing structures on the underside of the cap of a mushroom or similar fungus
  4. respiratory organ of aquatic animals that breathe oxygen dissolved in water
  5. (gilled) branchiate: provided with gills; "a gilled tadpole"
  6. A gill is a respiratory organ found in many aquatic organisms that extracts dissolved oxygen from water, afterward excreting carbon dioxide. (It does not break up water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen to absorb oxygen. ...
  7. The Gill was an English car based on the Astra and built in George Street, Paddington, London from 1958 to 1960 by a subsidiary of the British Anzani Company. It was another product of the fuel shortages that occurred during the 1956 Suez Crisis.
  8. Gill (Buckinghamshire cricketer) (first name and dates of birth and death unknown) was a noted All-England cricketer of the 18th century who was a prominent wicketkeeper. Personal details of Gill, including his first name, have not been found in surviving records.
  9. Gill is a surname found commonly among people of the Jatt race in northwestern India. Though, to westerners, Gill seems like a familiar given name (derived from versions of William), the Gill surname does not have the same etymological origins.
  10. This is a list of characters appearing in the animated series Kim Possible.
  11. Gill is a lunar crater that is located near the southeastern limb of the Moon. Due to its proximity to the edge of the Moon as seen from the Earth, this crater is viewed nearly from the side and it can become hidden from sight due to libration. ...
  12. (Gills) An organ that is used for respiration, oxygen is extracted from the water and carried by the blood around the body and at the same time carbon dioxide is excreted into the water from the gills, the majority of the ammonia produced by fish comes from the gills.
  13. (Gills) the fleshy and highly vascular organs comparable to lungs used in aquatic respiration
  14. (gills) respiratory organ, featherlike structure for getting oxygen from water into blood; found at the base of the legs, under the carapace of a lobster
  15. (GILLS) Thin sheetlike curtains that usually bear spores. They are radially arranged under the caps of certain mushrooms.
  16. (GILLS) flat, vertically oriented plates of tissue that bear the hymenium in most agarics; also called lamellae.
  17. (Gills) Close, adnate to adnexed, cream-colored when young, later mottled dingy brown to soot-black. Gill edges white and slightly fringed.
  18. (Gills) Feathery vascular structures through which certain amphibians (especially larvae) extract oxygen from the water
  19. (Gills) Kind of like lungs in humans, these are used to take oxygen out of the water. They are located right behind the head of the fish.
  20. (Gills) Many marine animals have gills. They are specialised gas exchange surfaces designed to bring the animal's blood into close contact with water. Gills have a high surface area for oxygen to diffuse into the blood and for carbon dioxide to move out. ...
  21. (Gills) Organs through which oxygen is absorbed from the water; protected by gill cover called opercle or operculum.
  22. (Gills) Place of respiration and filtration, consisting of many plume-like filaments arranged around a central axis. There are eight gills on each side.
  23. (Gills) The lungs of a fish, as water flows across the gills the oxygen within them diffuses into the fishes blood and is carried though out of the body.
  24. (Gills) Thin walled organs of marine animals used for respiration.*
  25. (Gills) means an opening on a fish or other sea animal that help it get oxygen from the water. What’s the word?