How to use in-sentence of “crab”:
+ Traditionally, crab cakes are fried in vegetable oil.
+ It is folded under its body, and may not be visible at all unless the crab is turned over.
+ The ginkgo tree, the coelacanth and the horseshoe crab are good examples.
+ Recent analysis of historical records have found that the supernova that created the Crab Nebula probably appeared in April or early May, rising to its maximum brightness of between apparent magnitude −7 and −4.5 by July.
+ However, a Japanese spider crab was once found as far south as Su-ao, in eastern Taiwan.
+ Some of these shells are quite big, as the horseshoe crab can grow up to two feet long and a foot wide.

Example sentences of “crab”:
+ George’s other discoveries include a fossilized insect with three pairs of wings and a tiny horseshoe crab that supplies a missing link in evolutionary history.
+ This area, the estuary south of the Northern Neck peninsula, is a productive oyster and crab fishery.
+ The coconut crab is a large edible land crab related to the hermit crab.
+ It looks a little like a crab, but its long arms are covered with yellow fur that looks like silk, so its discoverers, from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Insititute, named it the Yeti Crab or Yeti Lobster.
+ Crustacea range in size from a parasite 0.1mm long, to the Japanese spider crab with a leg span of up to 14ft.
+ A horseshoe crab has twelve legs: five pairs of walking legs and a set of tiny pincers.
+ In the Pacific Northwest states of America crab rangoon are also known as crab puffs.
+ George's other discoveries include a fossilized insect with three pairs of wings and a tiny horseshoe crab that supplies a missing link in evolutionary history.
+ This area, the estuary south of the Northern Neck peninsula, is a productive oyster and crab fishery.
+ The William Parsons, 3rd Earl of RosseEarl of Rosse observed the nebula at Birr Castle in 1848, and referred to the object as the Crab Nebula because a drawing he made of it looked like a crab.
+ They are stuffed with a combination of cream cheese, lightly flaked crab meat with Welsh onionscallions and/or garlic.
+ The horseshoe crab has an effective immune system.
+ Some kinds of crab apples make good applesauce.
+ The language in Horseshoe crab isn’t simple at all.
More in-sentence examples of “crab”:
+ Each male fiddler crab stands out in front of his burrow waiting for the females to return from eating.
+ When Red tried to swim with a mask with a pipe, but he did not get out and he went to the bottom, the crab jumped on it.
+ The reason the male fiddler crab has such a big claw is to attract females.
+ Varieties of crab apple are selected to bloom at the same time as the apple trees in an orchard, and the crabs are planted every sixth or seventh tree, or limbs of a crab tree are grafted onto some of the apple trees.
+ He used this term because he thought that if a solid malignant tumor was cut into, its veins looked like a crab: “the veins stretched on all sides as the animal the crab has its feet, whence it derives its name”.
+ The horseshoe crab population ranges from the Yucatán Peninsula to northern Maine, but they are most commonly found in the mid-Atlantic region between Virginia and New Jersey.
+ Maryland surrounds most of the Chesapeake Bay, and the state is known for its Crabs and Crab Cakes.
+ This variation of “surimi” is quite common in the West as it is a cheap substitute for real crab meat.
+ When at rest the ant-mimicking crab spider “Amyciaea” does not closely resemble “Oecophylla”, but while hunting it imitates the behavior of a dying ant to attract worker ants.
+ The Japanese spider crab is a species of Marine biologymarine crab, and is the only member in the genus “Macrocheira”.
+ A well-known example of such a nebula is the Crab Nebula, left over from a supernova that was observed in China and North America in 1054.
+ Like most crabs, when a shore crab gets too big for its shell, it sheds its shell.
+ One American way to prepare crab meat is by extracting it and adding a flour mix, creating a crab cake.
+ The cloudy remnants of SN 1054 are now known as the Crab Nebula.
+ Alaskan king crab fishing is an event done in the winter in the Bering Sea near Alaska.
+ The Japanese spider crab has the largest leg span of any arthropod in the world, reaching up to 3.8meters.
+ The brown huntsman spider, also known as the giant crab spider or the cane spider, is a species of spider.
+ Determined to find out who the enemy is, Bond discovers that Strangways was doing some research on an island called Crab Key and it’s owner, a mysterious Chinese man called Dr.
+ The hermit crab is a type of crab that does not have a hard shell.
+ The amount of money can be from nothing to tens of thousands of dollars depending on how many crab the fishermen caught.
+ The Chesapeake Bay can not sustain the higher life that once proliferated these waters, and 3 of the main harvests need to be re-stocked by man in order to maintain 1/10th of the numbers – Oysters and Rockfish, and more recently as reported in the Capital, Blue Crab stocks are at an all-time and ever-decreasing low, with scientists from University of Maryland researching how to raise crabs for re-introduction.
+ Forest Praying Mantis and the Singapore Freshwater Crab are some of the rare animals found there.
+ The Crab nebula is a supernova remnant which probably exploded in 1054 AD.
+ The hermit crab is a crustacean, but it is very different from other crustaceans.
+ A ghost crab is crab of the genus “Ocypode”.
+ To show people how dangerous crab fishing is, the Discovery Channel made a series called Deadliest Catch about the fishermen.
+ Each male fiddler crab stands out in front of his burrow waiting for the females to return from eating.
+ When Red tried to swim with a mask with a pipe, but he did not get out and he went to the bottom, the crab jumped on it.
+ Some crab apples are used as rootstocks for domestic apples to stand up to cold or drought.
+ The Crab Nebula itself was first observed in 1731 by John Bevis.
+ Alaskan crab fishing is one of the USA’s most dangerous jobs.
+ On the second day, Sebastian the crab gathers the other sea animals together and they sing “Kiss the Girl”, hoping to make Eric kiss Ariel.
+ Previous analysis showed that with X-ray and gamma ray energies above 30 keV, the Crab is the strongest persistent source in the sky.
+ The creation of the Crab Nebula corresponds to the bright SN 1054 supernova, which was recorded by Chinese astronomers in 1054 AD.
+ The back legs have hooks that anchor the hermit crab into the shell without difficulty.
+ The horseshoe crab or king crab is a benthic or bottom-dwelling creature.
+ Because of the many blossoms and small sized fruit, crab apples are popular for use in bonsai.
+ National crab rangoon day is october 2nd.
+ It is not a crab at all, but a relative of the arachnids.
+ Most hermit crab species live on the ocean floor, but many live on land.
+ The annual Christmas Island red crabred crab mass wet season and in synchronisation with the cycle of the moon.
+ This means crab or crayfish in Greek.
+ One of the best examples of this is the Crab nebula, in Taurus.
+ The Japanese spider crab has the largest leg span of any arthropod in the world, reaching up to 3.8meters long.
+ In Maryland, blue crab is often eaten with Old Bay Seasoning.
+ They are also known as the giant crab spiders, due to the way they look.
+ When the hermit crab grows in size, it finds a larger shell.
+ A great crab crawled from the swamp to help the Hydra.
+ A female shore crab can lay up to nearly 200 thousand eggs at once.
+ The fiddler crab eats by first opening its mouth, then using its maxillipeds, it scoops in a small amount of mud or sand, depending on where it lives.
+ A fiddler crab, also called a calling crab, is a land crab that lives in mud or sand flats near the beach.
+ The crab nebula is a good example.
