: any of a family (Nephropidae and especially Homarus americanus) of large edible marine decapod crustaceans that have stalked eyes, a pair of large claws, and a long abdomen and that include species from coasts on both sides of the North Atlantic and from the Cape of Good Hope
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The menu has aged Texas wagyu, lobster, sea bass and lamb chops.—
Ella Gonzales,
Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
26 June 2026 Don’t forget to indulge in lobster at one of the many eateries in town, such as Fish House Grill.—
Jaclyn Greenberg,
Parents,
29 June 2026 The dish includes French fries topped with lobster and a little shrimp marinated in a butter/garlic sauce and then topped with cheese sauce.—
Pamela McLoughlin,
Hartford Courant,
29 June 2026 Butter yellow continues its reign as one of the most popular summer polishes, but expensive-looking shades of Tiffany blue and lobster red are gaining traction just as quickly.—
Ariel Wodarcyk,
InStyle,
26 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for lobster
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Old English loppestre, from loppe spider
First Known Use
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Time Traveler
The first known use of lobster was
before the 12th century