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Cockle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cockle may refer to: • Cockle (bivalve) • Cockle (weed) • Berwick cockles, a confectionery from Scotland • The phrase warm the cockles of one's heart may refer to the similarity in shape of the hea...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockle |
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Cockle (bivalve) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The delightful idiom 'cockles of your heart' presents great difficulties in finding its source. ... It may be that the shape and spiral ribbing of the ventricles of the heart reminded surgeons of the two valves of the cockle. But I can’t find an example of the word cockle being applied to the heart outside this...
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Entry page to Captain Cockles Cyber Home. Read about Captain Cockle Adventures, and the Author. Dr John Joyce. ... This is the super-sub Cormorant brainchild of Captain Horatio Nelson Cockle, inventor, marine biologist and submarine commander, whose amazing exploits with his wife and grandchildren are told in a series...
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In 1965 a regulating order was passed in Parliament to ensure that the cockle industry in Penclawdd was safe for future generations of gatherers. This means that only those gatherers with a license are allowed to fish for cockles in the Burry Estuary.
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The shell of the cockle, a mussel, is somewhat heart-shaped, but that may not have produced this phrase. Entry from Webster's Second Unabridged, 1934: "Cockles of the heart: A phrase (in which 'cockles' is of uncertain meaning) denoting the depths of the heart;
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Cockle tortella wholesale conus omaria melo maxima clam pawa conus omaria lambis cheragra chama lazarus conus literatus haliotis asinana shell fashion accessories conus virgo shells necklace capis hanging lamp spondylus barbatus shell. ... cockle; Shells Jewellery...
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Protothaca staminea, the rock cockle, is among the best known and most widely used for food. It usually does not exceed 3 in. (7.5 cm) in length. Rock cockles are poor diggers and inhabit packed mud, or gravel mixed with sand, usually 8 in.
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