What's the difference between puny and shrimp?

Puny


Definition:

  • (superl.) Imperfectly developed in size or vigor; small and feeble; inferior; petty.
  • (n.) A youth; a novice.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) She puts much of the ongoing disaster down to what she calls "a severe case of management capture", the puny powers possessed by the Co-op's members to hold anyone at the top to account, and its hopelessly complicated structure.
  • (2) He was so puny, not like the macho pictures you see of him riding a horse bareback, or fishing barechested," she said.
  • (3) When they first encounter their "admirer and pupil Zola" he strikes them as a "worn-out Normalien, at once sturdy and puny" but with "a vibrant note of pungent determination and furious energy".
  • (4) Then again, this is the Labour party we are talking about, and the policies supposed to lead us there are, so far, distinctly puny.
  • (5) As for forcing people to move, the new tax would be puny compared with the rates.
  • (6) Ministers keep boasting of the puny £100m transitional fund, supposed to tide charities over, but to what?
  • (7) (I say they, not we, because the Guardian is always a puny counterweight to these massed ranks on the right).
  • (8) Roosevelt's programme to rebuild war-torn Europe cost around 5% of US GDP – the lofty comparison only underlines the puniness of the euro version and elicits a snort of derision from newsrooms and trading floors across Europe.
  • (9) Abbott said the declaration of a caliphate showed that “Islamic State wants to emulate Mohammed whose early campaigns would have looked just as puny to the great powers of his day”.
  • (10) Those powers are puny compared to the ones they have willingly given away.
  • (11) When the American Film Institute bestowed the Lifetime Achievement Award upon Lean in 1990 (he made the trip to LA despite failing health), Spielberg paid tribute from the stage, saying of Lawrence...: 'It made me feel puny.
  • (12) Such abilities could transform our puny electronic equipment into a new generation of micro-scale devices.
  • (13) In ways that are measurable on a daily basis the post of mayor, directly accountable to the electorate, has improved the quality of life for Londoners, even if in its early phase it had puny powers and deserves more now.
  • (14) Donald Trump barely capable of squeezing wealth on to puny official form On Wednesday afternoon, Donald Trump announced that he had filed a personal financial disclosure with the Federal Election Commission, the last step needed to secure his presence on stage in the first Republican presidential debate in Cleveland on 6 August.
  • (15) Completely untroubled by United's puny attacking efforts after the opening 15 minutes, ­Barcelona kept swarming forward.
  • (16) But in 1908 their fortunes were on the up: Sydney had just got Charlie his break with the famous Fred Karno company and despite the impressario’s doubts about the “pale, puny, sullen-looking youngster”, he was an instant hit with audiences.
  • (17) So, too, have regional broadcasters whose vast workforces can dwarf their puny audience shares.
  • (18) The team's puny total of 15 Premier League goals should alarm City [West Brom and Blackpool have both scored more] and in the long term there must be an increased verve if they are to grasp some silverware.
  • (19) They have resorted to denial and to aligning themselves with the puny flag-waving of the Europhobes, who were out in force in this week's rebellion against David Cameron , hardly an arch federast.
  • (20) It had lost most of its territory in France and, in comparison to bold and dynamic Spain, was decidedly puny.

Shrimp


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To contract; to shrink.
  • (v.) Any one of numerous species of macruran Crustacea belonging to Crangon and various allied genera, having a slender body and long legs. Many of them are used as food. The larger kinds are called also prawns. See Illust. of Decapoda.
  • (v.) In a more general sense, any species of the macruran tribe Caridea, or any species of the order Schizopoda, having a similar form.
  • (v.) In a loose sense, any small crustacean, including some amphipods and even certain entomostracans; as, the fairy shrimp, and brine shrimp. See under Fairy, and Brine.
  • (v.) Figuratively, a little wrinkled man; a dwarf; -- in contempt.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Eukaryotic ribosomes were isolated from the cryptobiotic embryos and from the further-developed free-swimming nauplii of the brine shrimp Artemia salina.
  • (2) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Invasive freshwater killer shrimp ( Dikerogammarus villosus ) are likely in increase in number in the UK.
  • (3) There is evidence that they might predate on our native shrimps, on our insect larvae, possibly fish eggs.
  • (4) Larval salt glands isolated from the naupliar brine shrimp (Artemia salina) were examined using light microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy.
  • (5) The radioallergosorbent inhibition test, however, suggested that there may be no cross-reactivity or, if any, only very low cross-reactivity between midge allergens and mite, house dust (HD), silk, shrimp, or mosquito allergens.
  • (6) Shrimp-water extract was fractionated by chromatofocusing with pH and NaCl gradients.
  • (7) Shrimp-sensitive subjects also had significantly elevated serum levels of shrimp-specific IgG and IgA as compared to control individuals.
  • (8) We investigated the toxicity of 32 different mycotoxins, 7 macrolides, not 3 other fungal metabolites to Artemia saline (Brine Shrimp) larvae.
  • (9) Shrimp-specific IgE and IgG, but not IgM and IgA, were significantly higher in the group with shrimp hypersensitivity as compared to the control subjects.
  • (10) Both shrimp and bovine DNases are sensitive to iodoacetate inactivation under the same condition.
  • (11) In our experience the occurrence of urticaria, angioedema or anaphylaxis after meals in Chinese or Indonesian restaurants is more often due to IgE-mediated Type I food allergy, caused by consumption of shrimp, peanut or spices, in particular those of the parsley family (e.g.
  • (12) As to the foreign body, the patient remembered eating a shrimp, which was probably the foreign body in question.
  • (13) It is reliable and simple--The coefficients of variation for 1.0-5.0 micrograms As (III), kelp and dried small shrimp samples are 1.5-5.6%, 4.4% and 9.5%, respectively.
  • (14) Brine shrimp growth under these conditions was monitored by measuring body lengths during a 7-day exposure period.
  • (15) A variety of marine biota, including zooplankton, sargassum, surface plankton, squid, shrimp, and fish collected along the south Texas Outer Continental Shelf, were analyzed for Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb, Cr, Ni, Fe, and Mn.
  • (16) Wild P. monodon exoskeleton contained on average 26.3 ppm total carotenoid; normally pigmented farmed shrimp had a similar concentration (25.3 ppm).
  • (17) Subjects were classified by a history of food allergy (shrimp hypersensitivity) and atopic status.
  • (18) In the cities of Oasis and Riverside, Calif., tadpole shrimp significantly reduced the abundance of immature mosquitoes (Cx.
  • (19) Findings of our study, therefore, suggest the potential of shrimp by-catch for the preparation of fish portions in view of its high acceptability and simple processing technique, by using marine resources not fully utilized at present.
  • (20) The luciferin of the bioluminescent decapod shrimp, Oplophorus gracilorostris, was purified and studied with respect to u.v.