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Answer for the clue "Shoreline drive ", 9 letters:
esplanade

Alternative clues for the word esplanade

Word definitions for esplanade in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a long stretch of open level ground (paved or grassy) for walking beside the seashore

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Esplanade \Es`pla*nade"\, n. [F. esplanade, Sp. esplanada, explanada, cf. It. spianata; fr. Sp. explanar to level, L. explanare to flatten or spread out. See Explain .] (Fort.) A clear space between a citadel and the nearest houses of the town. --Campbell ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Esplanade commonly refers to a raised walkway. It may also refer to one of the following.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Al-Aqsa is one of the two mosques on the Haram al-Sharif esplanade in Jerusalem. ▪ Along the esplanade , countless cafés, and tempting ice-cream parlours vie for attention. ▪ Beach and esplanade include croquet, tennis and water ...

Usage examples of esplanade.

Rue du Bac in the very centre of the city, passes before the Palais Bourbon, crosses first the Esplanade des Invalides, and then the Champ de Mars, to end at the Boulevard de Grenelle, in the black factory region.

He went away, and I left the coffee-house a moment after him, but when I reached the end of the street, instead of going towards the esplanade, I proceeded quickly towards the sea.

As we got to Kamp Hotel on the Esplanade Harvey stopped the car and got out.

The marimba player was setting up his instrument on a broad sidewalk opposite the esplanade, while eager natives watched.

Uncle Charley stopped to slip five sols into the poor box before he opened the front door onto the esplanade.

They had climbed up the Kanoni road past the archaeological museum and the old fort on its island across a causeway, along the esplanade and around the tip of the peninsula to Arseniou, then along the north shore past the containership fleet landing of the old port, past the late-sixteenth-century Venetian new fort toward the new fleet landing and the Hippodrome.

He went downstairs and found a pondside esplanade that had fewer mannequins walking along it.

He was a success at his job on the Esplanade which occupied him five days a week and on weekday evenings he usually took a walk, or drove out with Rachel, or drank a pint with Tapper Sugg in one or other of the local taverns.

Mathieu was very partial to the avenues, planted with fine trees, which radiate from the Champ de Mars and the Esplanade des Invalides, supplying great gaps for air and sunlight.

There, they drove along an interminable esplanade of trees and gardens, lined on one side by hotels the size of Pennsylvania Station, on the other by an endless stretch of cabins and bathhouses that blocked all view of the beaches.

A fine carriage, drawn by a pair of high-stepping perchers, swerved in front of him and rolled off along the esplanade.

He went away, and I left the coffee-house a moment after him, but when I reached the end of the street, instead of going towards the esplanade, I proceeded quickly towards the sea.

I left her in a state of frenzy, and rushed out, towards the esplanade, to cool myself, for I was choking.

They were leaving the French Quarter now, turning left on the boulevarded and tree-lined Esplanade Avenue, deserted except for the receding taillights of another car disappearing swiftly toward Bayou St.

In those days also it was the style for girls to wear long, embroidered shawls and orchids in their hair—these shawls were part of numerous dances of the period, when at midnight in the public bandshells, groups of music students from the university would unpack their instruments, and the asphalt esplanades would fill with lithe, expectant couples.