Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Another commonly eaten roe is that from the cod (torsk).
Today the Torsk is part of the Baltimore Maritime Museum.
Cod (torsk), a common white fish in general food preparation (baked, steamed, fried).
Other common names include brismak, brosmius, torsk and moonfish.
The restaurant has sea views to go with its seafood - unusual offerings might include wolf-fish, megrim, torsk and sea-witch.
In 1945, Torsk made two war patrols off Japan, sinking one cargo vessel and two coastal defense frigates.
Continuing her aggressive action, Torsk fired a Mark 28 torpedo at the frigate which had already detected the submarine's presence.
The film's original Swedish title, Torsk på Tallinn contains a double entendre.
Enemy troops operated near Mayatsky, Torsk lakes, Romanov and Zmiev.
On 15 August, following four highly successful days of aggressive patrolling, Torsk received word of the cessation of hostilities.
On 2 June, while patrolling between Honshū and Hokkaidō, Torsk came upon a small coastal minelayer.
Off Amarubi Saki on the morning of 14 August, Torsk sighted a medium cargo ship and took up the chase.
Torsk had another disappointing encounter on 4 June when, while patrolling off Kobe Saki, she fired four torpedoes at a 700-ton freighter without scoring.
A little farther east is the Torsk, an American submarine that sank the last ship (a Japanese patrol boat) in World War II.
Properly translated, it means "Sucker for Tallinn", but torsk is also a Swedish slang term for a man who solicits the service of prostitutes.
Torsk paused briefly at Guam en route to an area off Kii Suido which she reached on 11 May and began lifeguard duty.
Mostetz School was built in 1907, named after homesteader Henry Mostoway and Torsk School was erected about the same time.
He was the Curator of the USS Torsk Submarine (Inner Harbor Baltimore).
This connection between the Vikings and the Gaels can be seen by the inclusion of tarsk as a loan word in Gaelic, from torsk in Norwegian.
At 1035, as the freighter and her escort approached Kasumi Ko, Torsk launched one of the new experimental Mark 28 torpedoes at the escorting ship.
They were followed by KSMB (En Slemmig Torsk), Missbrukarna, and more famously, Anti Cimex.
Early that afternoon, the submarine entered her patrol area and, on the following morning off Dogo Island, Torsk made a submerged periscope attack which sank a small coastal freighter.
The pastry was imported - along with such delicacies as aquavit and torsk (boiled cod) - by Danish immigrants, who came to Racine to build wagons and farm machinery.
As the freighter entered the harbor half an hour later, Torsk attempted to sink her but was unsuccessful, possibly because the torpedoes struck undetected reefs near the mouth of the harbor.
Torsk received two battle stars for World War II service and the Navy Commendation Medal for her service during the Cuban Missile Crisis.