berley

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun[edit]

berley (uncountable)

  1. (New Zealand, Australia) Material (frequently rancid) used as bait to attract fish or other organisms.
    Synonym: chum
    • 1895, Charles Thackeray, The Amateur Fisherman's Guide, page 34:
      Another artificial bait can be made by mixing up a berley, savoury in smell to the piscine race, but somewhat obnoxious to the olfactory nerves of human beings, of rotten herrings or tinned fish, bran and flour, into a tough paste and putting it into little bags of mosquito net or fine muslin.
    • 1988, Richard Allan, Go Fish Australia: All You Need to Know about Freshwater and Saltwater Fishing - a Comprehensive Guide for Everyone, page 45:
      In Australia, live baits or strip baits in a berley trail produce the big fish and a lot of anglers specialise in using this technique.
    • 2007, Julie McEnally, Complete Book of Fishing Baits and Rigs, page 18:
      Apart from its use as bait, bread is an essential berley for many fish. All of the above species are attracted by bread berley as are many others.
    • 2013 May, Chris Gaskin, “Lost & Found”, in New Zealand Geographic[1], number 121:
      A few larger black petrels and flesh-footed shearwaters land close by and pick away at scraps of berley.

Anagrams[edit]

Middle English[edit]

Noun[edit]

berley

  1. Alternative form of barly