Answer: EELS
EELS is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 457 times.
- Congers
- Wriggly fish
- Sushi supplies
- Spawning fish
- Trattoria entree
- Slippery critters
- Grown-up elvers
- Congers and kin
- Snaky fishes
- They may be smoked or pickled
- Reef lurkers
- Snakelike swimmers
- Sushi fish
- Fish lacking ventral fins
- Fish captured in pots
- Snakelike fish
- Snaky swimmers
- Slender fish
- They may be charged in the water
- "The Little Mermaid" baddies
- Unagi and anago, at a sushi bar
- Snigglers' catches
- Swamp ___ (predatory fish)
- Users of electrolocation
- Snigglers' prey
- Sinewy creatures
- Some are shockers
- Squiggly swimmers
- Smoked fish
- Denizens of the Sargasso Sea
- Lampreys, e.g.
- Smoked delicacies
- Kin of hagfish
- Slithery swimmers
- Fish caught in pots
- Wriggling fishes
- Slippery sorts
- They're caught in pots
- Unagi, in a sushi bar
- Pickled delicacies
- Aquatic zappers
- Coral reef dwellers
- Lengthy lurkers of the deep
- Morays
- Some sushi fare
- Meals for seals
- Often-smoked fish
- Slippery swimmers
- Elusive swimmers
- Seals' meals
- Catch in pots
- Wrigglers
- Jellied dishes in England
- Slithery fishes
- They may shock you
- Reef dwellers
- Morays, e.g.
- Sniggler's take
- Sources of some leather
- Fish with only minute fins
- Fish that can move equally well forward and backward
- They might store electric charges
- Spiny ___ (aquarium fish)
- Conger line
- Sashimi fare
- Symbols of slipperiness
- Sushi stuffers
- Shocking swimmers
- Slippery fish
- Wriggly critters
- Sinuous shockers
- Stunning swimmers
- Adult grigs
- Long swimmers
- Skinny dippers?
- They may be shocking
- Slim swimmers
- South American freshwater shockers
- Elongated swimmers
- Slim sea creatures
- "I like ___, except for meals" (Nash)
- Sniggler's prey
- Spitchcocks
- Electrified swimmers
- Morays and congers
- They get into sushi
- Some coral reef predators
- Conger and moray
- Slimy-skinned fishes
- Wet wigglers
- Wet zappers
- Swimmers that don't kick
- They may have electric organs
- Serpentine swimmers
- "I don't mind ___, Except as meals ..." (Ogden Nash)
- They're into sushi
- They may be smoked
- Skinny swimmers
- Slippery ones
- Slippery creatures
- Lamprey look-alikes
- Electrifying swimmers?
- Wiggly swimmers
- Reef predators
- Bait shop purchase
- Shockers in the deep
- Congers and morays, e.g.
- Elusive ones
- Sargasso Sea spawners
- Anago and unagi, e.g.
- Band with the 1996 hit "Novocaine for the Soul"
- They're slippery when wet
- Apodal creatures
- Seals eat them
- Marine predators
- See 63-Down
- Long fish
- Flotsam and Jetsam, in "The Little Mermaid"
- They're served with rice in unadon
- They can be smoked
- They're unarmed, but dangerous
- Otters eat them
- Producers of currents in currents?
- Jellied dish
- Marine shockers
- Rock band with a fishy name
- Aquatic shockers
- Slender swimmers
- Reef denizens
- Sinuous swimmers
- Sniggler's pursuit
- Slim ocean predators
- Slithery fish
- They're trapped in pots
- "Fear Factor" fish
- Smorgasbord dish
- Sushi-bar selections
- Fish with charges
- Jellied delicacy
- British pie ingredients
- Sea slitherers
- Sushi-bar display
- Fish in sushi bars
- Snakeline swimmers
- Underwater slitherers
- ''Electric'' swimmers
- Otters' prey
- Wriggly swimmers
- Freshwater delicacies
- They may slither until smoked
- Sushi serving
- Paragons of slipperiness
- Mud, sand and cusk
- Anguine fish
- Electrolocation users
- Electric swimmers
- They lack ventral fins
- Elvers
- Elver's elders
- They may be charged at sea
- Sushi elements
- Slippery sea creatures
- Curvy swimmers
- Grown grigs
- Collared or jellied dishes
- Elongated wonders
- Sushi servings
- Snigglers' wrigglers
- Snakelike fishes
- ''Electric'' creatures
- They're slithery and may be smoked
- Some bioelectric swimmers
- Sigmoid swimmers
- Some stunning swimmers
- Sushi servings, perhaps
- Conger line?
- "Electro-Shock Blues" band
- Finless fish
- Seafood choice
- Snaky creatures
- Jellied delicacies
- Snaky fish
- Slippery catches
- Sniggler's pursuits
- Sushi ingredients, sometimes
- Adult elvers
- Squirmy catches
- Congers, e.g.
- Slippery sea critters
- Nocturnal swimmers
- Sargasso swimmers
- What many sushi bars offer
- Bioelectric critters, perhaps
- Undulating swimmers
- Scaleless wonders
- Marine wrigglers
- Anguilliform creatures
- Bioelectric critters
- Soft-finned fishes
- Grown-up grigs
- Scaleless fish
- Elver's parents
- They may be smoked or electric
- Elongated fish
- They're unarmed, but could be dangerous
- Some jellied dishes
- They may be shockers
- Japanese restaurant stock
- Anguine fishes
- Hydroelectricity providers?
- Unagi sources
- Wriggly, watery critters
- Members of a wriggly field?
- Elusive types
- Moray and conger
- Sea shockers
- Some electrical generators
- Sushi choices
- Fishes that may shock you
- Stork's supper, sometimes
- Sushi-bar fare
- Bioelectric swimmers
- Stork's supper, perhaps
- Electrifying wonders
- Anago and unagi
- They're difficult to grasp
- Deep shockers
- Wiggling fish
- Sargasso Sea migrants
- "Electric" creatures
- Snakes in lakes
- Sargasso Sea dwellers
- "Electric" swimmers
- Morays, for instance
- Some are shocking
- Fish with slimy layers
- "End Times" band
- Sushi bar stock
- Shriekers in "The Princess Bride"
- Moray and lamprey
- Creatures with electrocytes
- Sushi chef's purchases
- Electrifying swarm
- Japanese cuisine staple
- High-voltage creatures
- Long-bodied swimmers
- Their defenses may be shocking
- Slithery ocean burrowers
- Fisherman's slippery catches
- Sargasso Sea swimmers
- Unagi, at a sushi bar
- 37-Across swimmers
- Erstwhile elvers
- Grownup elvers
- Lampreys
- Slithery group
- Very thin fish
- Jellied fishes
- Serpentine fish
- Fish that wriggle
- 'Electric' swimmers
- Exemplars of elusiveness
- Shockers in the "Journal of Biological Oceanography"?
- Sushi bar selections
- Fish without scales
- Some sushi sources
- Great Barrier Reef denizens
- Slithery critters
- Wet wrigglers
- Hydroelectricity suppliers?
- Ribbon-like fish
- Some nonkosher fish
- Sniggler's catch
- Ocean current sources?
- Lagoon lurkers
- Smoked seafood
- Consumers of crustaceans
- Grilled fish in Japanese unadon
- Cave-dwelling fish
- Sushi options
- Ocean burrowers
- 27-Down predators
- Sushi bar layout
- Ones unable to swim straight?
- Slippery devils
- Slippery delicacies
- Sushi bar display
- They may be shocking until smoked
- Fishes caught in pots
- Elongated fishes
- Sinuous fish
- Fish without pelvic fins
- Traditional Cockney delicacies
- Great Barrier Reef swimmers
- Slithery ones
- Slithery school
- Lake snakes
- Some use electric organs
- 88-Down, e.g.
- Congers and morays
- Slippery varmints
- Sleek swimmers
- Slippery fishes
- Electrified fishes
- Sniggler's catches
- Fall migrators to the sea
- Ocean dwellers
- Mud ___ (bottom-dwelling fish)
- Snaky sea dwellers
- Popular Japanese pizza topping
- Electric ___
- They lack pelvic fins
- Swimmers caught in pots
- Sushi staple
- Shockers in a river
- Snigglers' catch
- Bioelectric creatures
- Fish that can swim backwards
- Symbols of elusiveness
- Underwater wrigglers
- Electrifying fish
- River shockers
- Twisting fish
- Electrified fish
- "Slippery" swimmers
- Unadon fillets
- Seafood often smoked
- Long fishes
- Wriggly sea creatures
- Ambush predators of the sea
- Congers and such
- Fish used as bait in bass fishing
- Sushi supply
- Skinny fish
- Electrical fish
- Reef wrigglers
- Sea wrigglers
- Dodgy types
- 'Electric' fish
- Sushi kitchen supply
- Jellied ___ (English seafood dish)
- Jellied or smoked seafood
- Sinuous coral reef dwellers
- Stuff seen in sushi
- Slim, slithery fishes
- They're slithery and slippery
- Slithering sea creatures
- Sushi fare
- Narrow-bodied swimmers
- Sushi sources
- Ingredients in some London pies
- Jellied ___ (English fish dish)
- Sniggler's haul
- Wriggly fishes
- Wrigglers in reefs
- Sinuous creatures
- Thin fishes
- Fish trapped in pots
- Slithering water creatures
- Long, wriggly swimmers
- Charged fish?
- "A creel of ___, all ripples": Sylvia Plath
- Slithering fishes
- Wrymouths' cousins
- They start as elvers
- Slithery sea creatures
- Certain reef dwellers
- They're often smoked
- Shocking creatures
- Sniggles
- What Nash rhymed with "meals"
- "Electric" fishes
- Grigs
- Slithering fish
- Sea cave dwellers
- Sources of shocks in rivers
- Sand-burrowing marine creatures
- Pot-caught fishes
- Non-fat fishes?
- Slippery sushi stuff
- Congers and others
- Popular bait for catching striped bass
- Swimmers that can be 13 feet
- Some bottom-dwellers
- River swimmers
- Slinky swimmers
- Some fish in sushi
- Snaky sea creatures
- Coral reef denizens
- Fish Nash rhymed with "meals"
- Prey for barracudas
- Snakelike sea creatures
- Fish with poisonous blood
- Fish in unadon
- Unadon fish
- "Electric" fish
- Fish in the order Anguilliformes
- ___ and Escalators (board game in "SpongeBob SquarePants")
- Creatures that can have two sets of jaws and teeth
- Wet shockers
- Swimmers that may be electric
- Swimmers shaped like snakes
- Broiled sushi fish
- Long, slinky fishes
- Electric ___ (shocking fishes)
- Flotsam and Jetsam in "The Little Mermaid," species-wise
- Slimy aquatic animals
- Fish whose blood is toxic to humans
- Elongated sea creatures
- Unagi roll ingredients
- Fish in British pies
- Morays and others
- Electric ___ (shocking swimmers)
- Fishes in unadon
- Flotsam and Jetsam in "The Little Mermaid"
- Fishes sometimes steamed with douchi
- Some creatures in the ocean's "midnight zone"
- Fish that are mostly nocturnal
- Fish that use magnetoreception
- Electric ___ (shocking fish)
- Sources of electricity in a current?
- "I don't mind ___ / Except as meals. / And the way they feels": Nash
- Some reef dwellers
- Sleek reef swimmers
- Long sea creatures
- Fish in Hamburg Aalsuppe
- The ancient Egyptians believed they were created from the sun hitting the Nile
- Unagi and anago, for two
- Unagi Day fishes
- Unadon ingredients
- Long, slippery fish
- Jellied fish in some British pies
- Unagi roll fish
- Nagayaki fish
- They may be long and shocking
- Their blood is toxic to humans
- Creatures described as anguilliform
- Fish that may be hard to fillet
- Unagi and anago
- Some snakelike fish
- Snakelike fish that are abundant in Lake Hamana
- Fish in a swarm
- Fish with transparent babies
- Slithering swimmers
- Fishes such as Flotsam and Jetsam in "The Little Mermaid"
- Fish that are often prepared kabayaki-style
- Delicacies for which Aveiro, Portugal, is known
- Shocking fish in the Amazon
- Ursine : bears :: anguilliform : ___
- Fish whose juveniles can climb walls
- Slitherers in the sea
- Ursula's slithery pets in "The Little Mermaid"
- Fish that can survive for several hours on land
- Fish that lack pelvic fins
- Snaky fish with transparent babies
- Aquatic wrigglers
- Nocturnal reef hunters