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A poetic term for a shore (as the area periodically covered and uncovered by the tides)
Answer for the clue "A poetic term for a shore (as the area periodically covered and uncovered by the tides) ", 6 letters:
strand
Alternative clues for the word strand
Word definitions for strand in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Strand \Strand\, n. [AS. strand; akin to D., G., Sw., & Dan. strand, Icel. str["o]nd.] The shore, especially the beach of a sea, ocean, or large lake; rarely, the margin of a navigable river. --Chaucer. Strand birds . (Zo["o]l.) See Shore birds , under ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a pattern forming a unity within a larger structural whole; "he tried to pick up the strands of his former life"; "I could hear several melodic strands simultaneously" line consisting of a complex of fibers or filaments that are twisted together to form ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"individual fiber of a rope, string, etc.," late 15c., probably from a continental Germanic source akin to Old High German streno "lock, tress, strand of hair," Middle Dutch strene "a skein, hank of thread," German Strähne "a skein, strand," of unknown ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Strand is an album by The Spinanes , released on February 27, 1996.
Usage examples of strand.
Without the interfering strands hanging in her eyes she was better able to see to her task and her fingers moved with agile speed and efficiency even though the blood continued to ooze, though with much less frequency as the wound was stitched closed.
Somewhere deep inside me, strands of DNA were coding for alanine and tryptophan and other amino acids, building up the proteins of chemical memory for my brain to read.
Strand and Cockspur Street, Cabrillo pulled up next to the Ural and kicked at Amad with his boot.
And if this model were correct, then a pre-training right IMHV lesion, already shown not to be amnestic by itself, would disrupt this flow, and post-training LPO lesions, otherwise amnestic, would no longer be so because the memory would have been stranded in the left IMHV.
The peg-rhizoids, which are peculiar to the group, converge under shelter of the amphigastria to the midrib, beneath which they form a wick-like strand.
They felt the slow, painful growth of the artist, the fumbling toward maturity of expression, the upheaval that had taken place in Paris, the passionate outburst of his powerful voice in Arles, which caught up all the strands of his years of labour.
Rui Fernandez, reinforced by some 200 of his men who had succeeded in escaping from the stranded armadilla, now turned his attention to the settlement.
She stole to the graveyard to pray her silent prayers over her weaving: aster, asphodel, rosemary, and rue, each bound into a chaplet tied with three strands of her silvery hair.
Painfully tentative tugs at its contractile strands brought the dense, dark axial bar safely down into the pit.
There had been men, such as Lord Fawn on one side and Mr Boffin on the other, who had found themselves stranded disagreeably,--with no certain position,--unwilling to sit behind a Treasury bench from which they were excluded, and too shy to place themselves immediately opposite.
De ommuring bood nog steeds geen bescherming aan de krottenwijk La Perla, die dicht bij het strand was ontstaan.
Once more, she was Miss Capel, whose name was only to familiar to the Employment Bureau and not a stranded nonentity.
They had brought old sail canvas from the carack and made shelters along the strand, where beef was still roasting and the ale granted them by their captain was doled out sparingly.
Pendergast recognized it as a human nerve strand, undoubtedly from the cauda equina at the base of the spinal cord.
On the other hand, a writer in the Strand Magazine points out that an insurance investigator some years ago gathered a list of 225 centenarians of almost every social rank and many nationalities, but the majority of them Britons or Russians.