goose barnacle









goose barnacle


goose barnacle ExamplesWord Origin noun

  1. See under barnacle1(def 1).

Origin of goose barnacle First recorded in 1880–85 barnacle 1[bahr-nuh-kuh l] noun

  1. any marine crustacean of the subclass Cirripedia, usually having a calcareous shell, being either stalked (goose barnacle) and attaching itself to ship bottoms and floating timber, or stalkless (rock barnacle or acorn barnacle) and attaching itself to rocks, especially in the intertidal zone.
  2. a person or thing that clings tenaciously.

Origin of barnacle 1 1580–85; perhaps a conflation of barnacle barnacle goose with Cornish brennyk, Irish báirneach limpet, Welsh brenig limpets, reflecting the folk belief that such geese, whose breeding grounds were unknown, were engendered from rotten ships’ plankingRelated formsbar·na·cled, adjective Examples from the Web for goose barnacle Historical Examples of goose barnacle

  • This genus is commonly known as the ship-barnacle, also as the goose-barnacle.

    The Sea-beach at Ebb-tide

    Augusta Foote Arnold

  • British Dictionary definitions for goose barnacle barnacle noun

    1. any of various marine crustaceans of the subclass Cirripedia that, as adults, live attached to rocks, ship bottoms, etc. They have feathery food-catching cirri protruding from a hard shellSee acorn barnacle, goose barnacle
    2. a person or thing that is difficult to get rid of

    Derived Formsbarnacled, adjectiveWord Origin for barnacle C16: related to Late Latin bernicla, of obscure origin goose barnacle noun

    1. any barnacle of the genus Lepas, living attached by a stalk to pieces of wood, having long feathery appendages (cirri) and flattened shells

    Word Origin and History for goose barnacle barnacle n.

    early 13c., “species of wild goose;” as a type of “shellfish,” first recorded 1580s. Often derived from a Celtic source (cf. Breton bernik, a kind of shellfish), but the application to the goose predates that of the shellfish in English. The goose nests in the Arctic in summer and returns to Europe in the winter, hence the mystery surrounding its reproduction. It was believed in ancient superstition to hatch from barnacle’s shell, possibly because the crustacean’s feathery stalks resemble goose down. The scientific name of the crustacean, Cirripedes, is from Greek cirri “curls of hair” + pedes “feet.”

    goose barnacle in Science barnacle [bär′nə-kəl]

    1. Any of various small marine crustaceans of the subclass Cirripedia that form a hard shell in the adult stage and attach themselves to underwater surfaces, such as rocks, the bottoms of ships, and the skin of whales.
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