noun.
Same as conk.
noun.
In the cephalopod mollusks, the postembryonic shell: contrasted with protoconch or embryonal shell, and with shell, a term which loosely covers the entire external skeleton.
noun.
The whelk, Fulgur carica
noun.
the helmet-shell, Cassis.
noun.
In Roman antiquity, the name for various small vessels used for oil, salt, etc.
noun.
Abbreviations of conchology.
noun.
A shell of any kind.
noun.
Specifically, a large marine shell, especially that of the Strombus gigas, sometimes called fountain-shell, from its use in gardens.
noun.
A spiral shell fabled to have been used by the Tritons as a trumpet, probably of the kind now constituting the genus Triton, and used as a musical instrument in the South Sea islands. Also conch-shell.
noun.
A trumpet in the form of a sea-shell. Also called Triton's-horn.
noun.
The external portion of the ear; the concha.
noun.
In architecture, the plain, ribless, concave surface of a vault or pendentive; the semidome of an apse; the apse itself. See apse. Also called concha.
noun.
[Also written conk, conck. konk.] One of the lower class of inhabitants of the Bahamas, and of the keys on the Florida reef: so named from their extensive use of the flesh from conchs as food.
noun.
One of an inferior class of white inhabitants of some parts of North Carolina.