clam
clam — 名詞
1. a small ocean animal whose soft fleshy interior is enclosed by two flat, roundis
蛤蜊
有兩片硬殼的食用海洋生物
a small ocean animal whose soft fleshy interior is enclosed by two flat, roundish shells that close tightly together; it is often found buried in coastal sands and gathered for eating.
The restaurant serves fresh clams with garlic butter every Friday evening.
那家餐廳每週五晚上供應新鮮蛤蜊搭配大蒜奶油。
collocation: fresh clams + garlic butter
The children spent the afternoon digging for clams at the beach near their house.
孩子們花了整個下午在住家附近的海灘挖蛤蜊。
collocation: dig for clams
Beatriz added fresh clams to the pasta sauce, which gave the dish a rich flavour.
Beatriz 把新鮮蛤蜊加到義大利麵醬汁裡,讓整道菜味道更濃郁。
A single clam can filter more than twenty litres of ocean water every day.
一顆蛤蜊每天可以過濾超過二十公升的海水。
The fisherman emptied a bucket of clams onto the dock and sorted them by size.
漁夫把一桶蛤蜊倒在碼頭上,按大小分類。
文法句型
plural form 'clams' for food references
用法筆記
When referring to clams as food on a plate, the plural form 'clams' is more common than the singular ('a plate of steamed clams' not 'a plate of steamed clam').
clam — 動詞
1. to hunt for edible clams by scraping and digging along a beach or tidal area, es
挖蛤蜊
在海灘挖掘蛤蜊
to hunt for edible clams by scraping and digging along a beach or tidal area, especially at low tide.
The Watanabe family went clamming at the inlet early Sunday morning.
渡邊一家人在週日清晨到小灣挖蛤蜊。
pattern: go clamming
Ravi clammed along the shore for hours but only found a handful of small ones.
Ravi 在岸邊挖了幾個小時的蛤蜊,卻只找到一小把。
past tense: clammed + along [location]
Tourists often try clamming without knowing how to spot the telltale bubbles in the sand.
觀光客常嘗試挖蛤蜊,卻不知道如何找出沙中的氣泡記號。
Every summer, Leila and her cousins go clamming with their grandfather at the shore.
每年夏天,Leila 和表兄妹們都會跟祖父到海邊挖蛤蜊。
A park ranger showed the students how to clam without harming the beach ecosystem.
一名公園管理員向學生示範如何在不破壞沙灘生態的條件下挖蛤蜊。
文法句型
go + clamming (gerund)
clam + prepositional phrase (at / on / along)
用法筆記
The gerund form 'clamming' is much more common than the base verb 'clam'. It appears most often in the phrase 'go clamming'.