| ESCOLAR | Slender spiny-finned fish also called the snake mackerel (7) |
| OPAH | Large soft-finned fish also called the moonfish (4) |
| SHOSHONE | Tribe called the "Snake Indians" by Meriwether Lewis |
| PERCOID | Any spiny-finned fish of the order that includes the sea bass, red mullet, etc. (7) |
| POMFRET | This deep-bodied spiny-finned fish is a regular item on the menu. (7) |
| SANDEEL | Silvery fish also called the launce (4,3) |
| SNOEK | Edible marine fish, Thyrsites atun, of the snake mackerel family (5) |
| GUPPY | Common tropical fish; also called the rainbow fish (5) |
| REMORA | Marine spiny-finned fish of the family Echeneidae that has a sucking disc on the top of its head (6) |
| PERCH | A freshwater, spiny-finned fish, valued as a food and game fish (5) |
| SEASURGEON | Tropical genus of spiny-finned fish (3,7) |
| TUNNY | Large marine spiny-finned fish of the genus Thunnus (5) |
| ANGLER | Spiny-finned fish of the order Pediculati (6) |
| DRAGONET | Small spiny-finned fish that lives at the bottom of shallow seas (8) |
| SCABBARDFISH | Spiny-finned fish of the genus Lepidopus (8,4) |
| FLATFISH | Marine spiny-finned fish such as the halibut or sole (8) |
| BARRAMUNDI | Large freshwater fish also called the Asian sea bass (10) |
| ONO | Hawaiian fish also called the wahoo |
| NILEPERCH | African freshwater fish, also called the Goliath barramundi (4,5) |
| SEASNAIL | Small spiny-finned fish of cold seas, with a soft scaleless body and the pelvic fins fused into a sucker (3,5) |