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Answer for the clue "Carried by the tides ", 8 letters:
seaborne

Alternative clues for the word seaborne

Word definitions for seaborne in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
adj. conveyed by sea

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. Transported on the sea or ocean, especially by floating on the sea. alt. Transported on the sea or ocean, especially by floating on the sea.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ a seaborne attack EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Between 1670 and 1750 the capital's intake of seaborne coal from the north-east averaged an annual half a million tons. ▪ Bristol, too, took in a whole range of seaborne food ...

Usage examples of seaborne.

City of Airgialla by King Roberto of Ulaid and his forces, Brian the Burly had given every indication of contemplation of an immediate, seaborne attack upon Islay and the Regulus.

Graydon lifted Sir Seaborne Margate off the ground and, with all of the other picnic-goers avidly watching, tossed him into the Thames.

Wilson replied that the 504th Paratroop Regiment was seaborne and not airborne because of a last-minute decision by General Clark.

Hordes of barnaclelike creatures clung tenaciously to a stone cliff face while patiently awaiting another meal, the next tidal flood of seaborne organic matter.

Summer folk worked the piers, scraped the drydocked sailing ships, and performed most of the grunt labor supporting seaborne trade, often with a cheerfulness that was inspirational to behold.

Like the seaborne attack, this, too, was makeshift: ancient jet liners towed plastic gravity-rafts in veering and dangerous-looking rows.

Britain, as the largest carrier of seaborne trade with the greatest interest in the free flow of neutral commerce, was host nation, and Sir Edward Grey the moving spirit and sponsor, though not a delegate.

While he crouched there, powerless to do aught but hold the walled capital without the aid of the earls and other magnates of the feudal kingdom, the Kennedy Clan and its septs, all fiery with the zeal of new converts, not only sent boatloads of slavering Balderites to carry the message of the Mother to the folk of Northern Ireland, but made so bold as to launch seaborne attacks against the islands and coastal lands held by the Clan MacLean and the Regulus of the Isles and that virtual if unnamed king's many dependent clans.

There were booths and ads for regular infantry, mountain soldiers, ski troops, seaborne assault forces, installation protection services, artillery specialists.