shore in English
- shore⇄expr. in shore, in or on the water, but near to the shore or nearer to the shore.
Ex. Steer in shore of them (Frederick Marryat). - shore⇄expr. off shore, in or on the water, but not far from the shore.
Ex. The yacht was anchored off shore opposite Sandy Point. - shore⇄expr. shores, land.
Ex. As one who long detain'd on foreign shores pants to return (William Cowper). - shore⇄noun a prop placed against or beneath something to support it; strut.
- shore⇄noun 1. land at the edge of a sea, lake, river, or other body of water.
Ex. The [Mississippi] River cuts at the shores to give itself man-size room; past Memphis and Vicksburg and New Orleans (Newsweek).
(SYN) strand.
2. land near a s - shore⇄shore (1), noun, verb, shored,shoring.
- shore⇄shore (2), noun, verb, shored,shoring.
- shore⇄shore (3), verb.
(Archaic.) a past tense of shear. - shore⇄shore (4), transitive verb, shored,shoring.
(Scottish.)
1. to threaten.
2. to scold.
3. to offer. - shore⇄v.t. to put or set ashore.
Ex. The boat was temporarily shored on the each (J. Spence). - shore⇄v.t. Usually, shore up. to prop up or support with shores.
Ex. We laid the ship aground ... and shored her up on each side (Daniel Defoe). The hydraulic mechanism also has been shored up by inserting metal filters in place of paper ones (Wall Stre
shore in Sindhi سنڌي
No additional English content available for 'shore'.