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sardine (n.)

early 15c., from Latin sardina, from Greek sardine, sardinos, often said to be from Sardo "Sardinia" (see Sardinia), the Mediterranean island, near which the fish probably were caught and from which they were exported. But Klein writes, "It is hardly probable that the Greeks would have obtained fish from so far as Sardinia at a time relatively so early as that of Aristotle, from whom Athenaios quotes a passage in which the fish sardinos is mentioned." Colloquial phrase packed like sardines (in a tin) is recorded from 1911.

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Definitions of sardine from WordNet

sardine (n.)
small fatty fish usually canned;
Synonyms: pilchard
sardine (n.)
any of various small edible herring or related food fishes frequently canned;
sardine (n.)
small fishes found in great schools along coasts of Europe; smaller and rounder than herring;
Synonyms: pilchard / Sardina pilchardus
sardine (n.)
a deep orange-red variety of chalcedony;
Synonyms: sard / sardius
From wordnet.princeton.edu