- sucker
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—suckerlike, adj./suk"euhr/, n.1. a person or thing that sucks.2. Informal. a person easily cheated, deceived, or imposed upon.3. an infant or a young animal that is suckled, esp. a suckling pig.4. a part or organ of an animal adapted for sucking nourishment, or for adhering to an object as by suction.5. any of several freshwater, mostly North American food fishes of the family Catostomidae, having thick lips: some are now rare.6. Informal. a lollipop.7. the piston of a pump that works by suction, or the valve of such a piston.8. a pipe or tube through which something is drawn or sucked.9. Bot. a shoot rising from a subterranean stem or root.10. Informal. a person attracted to something as indicated: He's a sucker for new clothes.11. Slang. any person or thing: He's one of those smart, handsome suckers everybody likes. They're good boots, but the suckers pinch my feet.v.t.12. Slang. to make a sucker of; fool; hoodwink: another person suckered by a con artist.v.i.13. to send out suckers or shoots, as a plant.[1350-1400; 1835-45 for def. 2; ME; see SUCK, -ER1]
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Any of 80–100 species (family Catostomidae) of freshwater food fishes found mostly in North America.Suckers can be distinguished from minnows by the sucking mouth, with protrusible lips, on the underside of the head. Generally sluggish, they suck up detritus, invertebrates, and plants from the bottom of lakes and slow streams. The species vary greatly in size. The lake chubsucker (Erimyzon sucetta) grows to 10 in. (25 cm) long; the bigmouth buffalo fish (Ictiobus cyprinellus) grows to 35 in. (90 cm) and over 70 lbs (32 kg).Sucker (Catostomus)Grant Heilman* * *
▪ fishany of the freshwater fishes constituting the family Catostomidae, similar to and closely related to the carp and minnows (Cyprinidae). There are about 80 to 100 species of suckers; except for a few species in Asia, all are North American. Many suckers are almost indistinguishable from minnows, but catostomids may often be recognized by the sucking, usually ventral mouth with protrusible lips.Suckers live on the bottom of lakes and slow streams and feed by sucking up invertebrates and plants. Generally rather sluggish fishes, the species vary considerably in size. The lake chubsucker (Erimyzon sucetta), for example, is a small species up to 25 cm (10 inches) long; the bigmouth buffalo fish (Ictiobus cyprinellus), a large sucker, measures up to 90 cm in length and 33 kg (73 pounds) in weight. Suckers are bony but are fished commercially and to some extent for sport. The various genera are known by such names as hog sucker (Hypentelium), buffalo fish (Ictiobus), carpsucker (Carpiodes), and redhorse, or jumprock (Moxostoma).* * *
Universalium. 2010.