Grigs |
Fishes |
Silver |
Apodes |
Elvers |
Morays |
Congers |
Fish ___ |
E's band |
Wigglers |
Sniggles |
Lampreys |
Long fish |
Fish dish |
Seal meal |
Wrigglers |
Thin fish |
Snipefish |
Sushi fish |
Anguillids |
N.Z. tunas |
Snaky ones |
Some grigs |
Sushi fare |
Snaky fish |
Smoked fish |
Conger line |
Dodgy types |
Lake snakes |
Spitchcocks |
Thin fishes |
Wet zappers |
Conger fish |
Adult grigs |
Long fishes |
Skinny fish |
Grown grigs |
Electric ___ |
Jellied dish |
Sushi staple |
Reef lurkers |
Sushi dishes |
Sushi fishes |
Sushi supply |
Wet wigglers |
Otter's prey |
Sea shockers |
Seals' meals |
Elusive ones |
Anguine fish |
Snaky fishes |
Finless fish |
Adult elvers |
Sinuous fish |
Morays, e.g. |
Slender fish |
Wriggly fish |
Slithery ones |
Slippery ones |
Deep shockers |
Elusive chaps |
Elusive types |
Mature elvers |
Ophidids' kin |
Skinny fishes |
Sushi sources |
Tank shockers |
Undulant ones |
Wet wrigglers |
Charged fish? |
Lampreys' kin |
Sea wrigglers |
Squiggly fish |
Sushi choices |
Twisting fish |
Unagi sources |
Sushi options |
Reef denizens |
Slim swimmers |
Sushi serving |
Wiggling fish |
Reef dwellers |
Spawning fish |
Sea creatures |
Shocking fish |
Catch in pots |
Long swimmers |
Congers, e.g. |
Slithery fish |
Seafood choice |
Anguine fishes |
Aquarium sight |
Elver's elders |
Fish born flat |
Jellied fishes |
Kin of hagfish |
Lagoon lurkers |
Reef wrigglers |
River shockers |
River swimmers |
Seals eat them |
Slippery sorts |
Smoked seafood |
Sushi elements |
Sushi-bar fare |
Very thin fish |
Uses a sniggle |
Wriggly fishes |
Lampreys, e.g. |
Sleek swimmers |
Sushi supplies |
Unadon fillets |
Curvy swimmers |
Sea slitherers |
Scaleless fish |
Reef predators |
Reef residents |
Sushi servings |
Grown-up grigs |
Elongated fish |
Snaky swimmers |
Snakelike fish |
'Electric' fish |
End Times" band |
(Slippery) fish |
Anago and unagi |
Aquarium sights |
Aquatic zappers |
Artful dodgers. |
Congers and kin |
Elver's parents |
Elvers' futures |
Finless wonders |
Jellied seafood |
Meals for seals |
Non-fat fishes? |
Sinewy swimmers |
Skinny dippers? |
Slinky swimmers |
Slippery devils |
Slippery school |
Slithery school |
Some are smoked |
Sushi creatures |
Twisty swimmers |
Electrical fish |
Ocean burrowers |
Slimy creatures |
Some sushi fare |
Marine shockers |
Otters eat them |
Slippery fishes |
Sniggler's take |
Sushi bar stock |
Serpentine fish |
Snaky creatures |
Slithering fish |
Wiggly swimmers |
Grown-up elvers |
Slithery fishes |
Snigglers' prey |
Squirmy catches |
Sniggler's haul |
Skinny swimmers |
Snake-like fish |
Trattoria entree |
Marine predators |
Electric" fishes |
Souljacker" band |
Congers and such |
Kin of nine-eyes |
Kin of ophidiids |
Lagoon predators |
Marine creatures |
Moves via twists |
Ribbon-like fish |
Slippery fellows |
Soft-finned fish |
Sushi bar fishes |
Sushi candidates |
Sushi provisions |
They're slippery |
Elongated fishes |
Malacopterygians |
Slippery catches |
Smorgasbord dish |
Snigglers' catch |
Sushi bar layout |
Wriggly critters |
Conger and moray |
Apodal creatures |
Elusive swimmers |
Sinewy creatures |
Sinuous shockers |
Slender swimmers |
Moray and conger |
Marine wrigglers |
Sigmoid swimmers |
Wriggling fishes |
Sinuous swimmers |
Aquatic shockers |
Wriggly swimmers |
Jellied delicacy |
Fishes, in a way |
Electrified fish |
Snakelike fishes |
Some are electric |
Fear Factor" fish |
Elongated wonders |
Fish for jellying |
Fish that wriggle |
Fish with charges |
Morays or congers |
Moray and lamprey |
Often-smoked fish |
Pit-dwelling fish |
Pot-caught fishes |
Sea cave dwellers |
Slippery shockers |
Slippery varmints |
Slithering fishes |
Snigglers' quarry |
Some are shocking |
Some are shockers |
Stunning swimmers |
Sushi ingredients |
Hombre Lobo" band |
Congers or morays |
Lampreys' cousins |
Scaleless wonders |
Shocking swimmers |
Smorgasbord items |
Sniggling catches |
Squiggly critters |
Sushi bar display |
Electric swimmers |
Electrifying fish |
Sargasso swimmers |
Slippery critters |
Squiggly swimmers |
Smoked delicacies |
Slithery critters |
Slithery swimmers |
Slippery" swimmers |
Congers and others |
Electric and moray |
Nine-eyes' cousins |
Slithery creatures |
Small-scale school |
Snaky sea dwellers |
Snigglers' catches |
Sniggler's targets |
Soft-finned fishes |
Some fish in sushi |
Some of the Apodes |
Some sushi sources |
They may shock you |
They're into sushi |
Underwater zappers |
Voracious teleosts |
Wrymouths' cousins |
Bait shop purchase |
Mud, sand and cusk |
Serpentlike fishes |
Shocking creatures |
Slippery customers |
Snakeline swimmers |
Snaky sea swimmers |
They can be smoked |
Wrigglers in reefs |
Electrified fishes |
Elongated swimmers |
Fish in sushi bars |
Shocking predators |
Jellied delicacies |
Morays and congers |
Nocturnal swimmers |
Pickled delicacies |
They may be smoked |
Congers and morays |
Sushi bar servings |
Slippery creatures |
Sniggler's pursuit |
Snakelike swimmers |
Trattoria offering |
Coral reef swimmers |
Entrées for otters |
Fish such as morays |
Lamprey look-alikes |
Limbless slitherers |
Shockers in a river |
Snaky sea creatures |
Some jellied dishes |
Some nonkosher fish |
Some reef residents |
Stuff seen in sushi |
Sushi bar purchases |
These can be smoked |
They get into sushi |
Vinegar ___ (worms) |
Kin of sand launces |
Long, squiggly fish |
Sniggler's pursuits |
These may be smoked |
Coral reef dwellers |
Fish without scales |
Slippery delicacies |
Undulating swimmers |
Serpentine swimmers |
Fish caught in pots |
Anguineous creatures |
Lampreys or congers |
Long, wriggly fishes |
Morays, for instance |
Slim ocean predators |
Slippery sushi stuff |
Some bottom-dwellers |
They may be shockers |
They might shock you |
They start as elvers |
They're often smoked |
Underwater wrigglers |
Wrymouths' relatives |
British pie contents |
Electrifying wonders |
Fish trapped in pots |
Seafood often smoked |
Shockers in the deep |
Sniggler's wrigglers |
Sushi kitchen supply |
They may be shocking |
Long-bodied swimmers |
Sushi-bar selections |
Bioelectric critters |
Bioelectric swimmers |
Electrified swimmers |
Anago and unagi, e.g. |
Aquarium attractions. |
Certain reef dwellers |
Bioelectric creatures |
Electrolocation users |
Freshwater delicacies |
Fishes caught in pots |
Long, skinny swimmers |
Sargasso Sea dwellers |
Slim, slithery fishes |
They lack pelvic fins |
Underwater slitherers |
Fish captured in pots |
Sargasso Sea migrants |
Wriggly sea creatures |
Unagi, in a sushi bar |
Slippery sea critters |
Sargasso Sea spawners |
Sargasso Sea swimmers |
Beautiful Freak" band |
Unagi, at a sushi bar |
Electricity generators |
''Electric'' creatures |
Fish with slimy layers |
Long "electric" fishes |
Long, wriggly swimmers |
Narrow-bodied swimmers |
Ocean current sources? |
Slippery sea creatures |
Slippery sushi fishies |
Smorgasbord delicacies |
Some stunning swimmers |
Anguilliform creatures |
Slithery sea creatures |
Sushi chef's purchases |
Symbols of elusiveness |
They lack ventral fins |
Electrifying swimmers? |
High-voltage creatures |
They're caught in pots |
British pie ingredients |
Fish with lethal pulses |
Mud _____ (salamanders) |
Slender, finless fishes |
Slithering sea-dwellers |
Snakelike group of fish |
Sushi servings, perhaps |
Swimmers caught in pots |
Swimmers that can shock |
Electric" sea creatures |
Japanese cuisine staple |
Stork's supper, perhaps |
Symbols of slipperiness |
They're trapped in pots |
Consumers of crustaceans |
Exemplars of elusiveness |
Fish resembling lampreys |
Some use electric organs |
Swimmers that don't kick |
They have no pelvic fins |
They're hard to pin down |
Underwater pit residents |
Users of electrolocation |
Wriggly, watery critters |
Fish that may be jellied |
Serpentine sea creatures |
Slithering sea creatures |
Congers and morays, e.g. |
Fish without pelvic fins |
They're slippery and wet |
Paragons of slipperiness |
Fall migrators to the sea |
Fish that resemble snakes |
Japanese restaurant stock |
Jellied dishes in England |
Orinoco River inhabitants |
Predatory slithery fishes |
Some bioelectric swimmers |
Spiny ___ (aquarium fish) |
Fish lacking ventral fins |
Skinny, slippery swimmers |
Stork's supper, sometimes |
Electro-Shock Blues" band |
Jellied or smoked seafood |
Fishes that may shock you |
They're slippery when wet |
Collared or jellied dishes |
Fish with only minute fins |
Slithering water creatures |
Some are over 11 feet long |
Some electrical generators |
Swamp ___ (predatory fish) |
They may be charged at sea |
They're difficult to grasp |
Last Stop: This Town" band |
Critters that may be "live |
What many sushi bars offer |
Last Stop: This Town" guys |
Mark Oliver Everett's band |
Daisies of the Galaxy" band |
The Little Mermaid" baddies |
Ambush predators of the sea |
Creatures with electrocytes |
Hydroelectricity providers? |
Hydroelectricity suppliers? |
Rock band with a fishy name |
Selections from a sushi bar |
Sinuous coral reef dwellers |
Sources of shocks in rivers |
They're smoked by the Dutch |
Fishes that may be electric |
Great Barrier Reef swimmers |
Members of a wriggly field? |
Lengthy lurkers of the deep |
Great Barrier Reef denizens |
Electric" snakelike swimmers |
Denizens of the Sargasso Sea |
Fish prepared kabayaki-style |
Fisherman's slippery catches |
Sushi ingredients, sometimes |
Swimmers that can be 13 feet |
What Nash rhymed with "meals |
Novocaine For The Soul" band |
Fish that can swim backwards |
Mr. E's Beautiful Blues" band |
Fish that are long and skinny |
Ones unable to swim straight? |
Snakelike "Hombre Lobo" band? |
Swimmers with a glass variety |
They may be smoked or pickled |
They may have electric organs |
They're slithery and slippery |
Wrigglers sought by snigglers |
Bioelectric critters, perhaps |
They may slither until smoked |
They're unarmed, but dangerous |
Electric ___ (shocking fishes) |
Jellied ___ (British delicacy) |
Mud ___ (bottom-dwelling fish) |
They may be smoked or electric |
Traditional Cockney delicacies |
Popular Japanese pizza topping |
Grilled fish in Japanese unadon |
Ingredients in some London pies |
Jellied ___ (English fish dish) |
Sand-burrowing marine creatures |
Unagi and anago, at a sushi bar |
Fish sometimes eaten by raccoons |
They may be charged in the water |
Fish used as bait in bass fishing |
Snakelike, slippery sea creatures |
They might store electric charges |
They may be shocking until smoked |
They're served with rice in unadon |
Jellied ___ (English seafood dish) |
South American freshwater shockers |
Producers of currents in currents? |
They're slithery and may be smoked |
Snakelike selections at a sushi bar |
Fish whose young are called "elvers |
Unagi and anago, in Japanese cuisine |
Fish that are jellied in British pies |
Fish served in the Basque dish angulas |
Popular bait for catching striped bass |
They're unarmed, but could be dangerous |
Snaky sea creatures that can be electric |
Fish that are found in some sushi dishes |
A creel of __, all ripples": Sylvia Plath |
I don't mind ___ / Except as meals" (Nash) |
Flotsam and Jetsam, in "The Little Mermaid |
Fish with "sawtooth" and "cutthroat" families |
Band with the 1996 hit "Novocaine for the Soul |
Shrieking sea creatures in "The Princess Bride |
When split and cooked, these become spitchcocks |
Ocean creatures that may be electrically charged |
Ocean creatures that may have an electrical charge |
I don't mind ___, Except as meals ..." (Ogden Nash) |
Fish that can move equally well forward and backward |
Shockers in the "Journal of Biological Oceanography"? |
Band whose "Saturday Morning" is featured in "Wordplay |
Shrieking ___ (underwater terrors in "The Princess Bride") |
Moray ___ (snakelike sea creatures that can exceed nine feet in length) |
Aquatic creatures that gave Electro his power in "The Amazing Spider-Man 2 |
Some are electric (and these are not technically of the namesake order, but that's what they're called, so let it go) |