ostrea edulis

listen to the pronunciation of ostrea edulis
Turkish - English
oyster
Of a pale beige colour tinted with grey or pink, like that of an oyster
Any marine bivalve mollusk of the Family Ostreidae, usually found adhering to rocks or other fixed objects in shallow water along the seacoasts, or in brackish water in the mouth of rivers
A pale beige color tinted with grey or pink, like that of an oyster

oyster colour:.

A person who keeps secrets and private information to him- or herself
{n} a bivalvular shell-fish
A name popularly given to the delicate morsel of dark meat contained in a small cavity of the bone on each side of the lower part of the back of a fowl
The common European oyster (Ostrea edulis), and the American oyster (Ostrea Virginiana), are the most important species
A shell fish that is sometimes eaten raw It may sometimes contain a pearl that has value to it
Four major species in the United States are: Atlantic, found along the East and Gulf coasts; the European, a flat-shelled, round oyster of the Northwest and Maine; the Olympia, the half-dollar-sized oyster grown in the Northwest; and the fruit-flavored Pacific oyster, known for its wildly scalloped shell
If you say that the world is someone's oyster, you mean that they can do anything or go anywhere that they want to. You're young, you've got a lot of opportunity. The world is your oyster. Any bivalve of two families, Ostreidae (true oysters) or Aviculidae (pearl oysters), found in temperate and warm coastal waters worldwide. Both valves (halves) have a rough, often dirty-gray outer surface and a smooth white inner lining (nacre). The lower valve, which affixes to a surface, is nearly flat. The smaller upper valve is convex and has rougher edges. The oyster filters its food, minute organic particles, from the water. Cultivated as food, oysters are regarded as a delicacy. Pearls are the accumulation of nacre around a piece of foreign matter
A person who keeps the secrets trusted to him
a grayish-white color
They are usually found adhering to rocks or other fixed objects in shallow water along the seacoasts, or in brackish water in the mouth of rivers
marine mollusks having a rough irregular shell; found on the sea bed mostly in coastal waters
a flat, edible shellfish that lives in shallow coastal waters and has a shell made up of two hinged parts
(n), a person who sprinkles his conversation with Yiddish expressions
gather oysters, dig oysters