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Firth of Forth

NOUN
  1. a large firth on the east coast of Scotland and the estuary of the Forth River; location of Edinburgh

How To Use Firth of Forth In A Sentence

  • The Angles eventually took the remainder of England as far north as the Firth of Forth, including the future Edinburgh and the Scottish lowlands’.
  • The hedgerows looked greener and the sunshine was glittering off the Firth of Forth. For Love or Money
  • Such was the popularity of these drinking dens that to meet the demand at the height of the boom in 1760, the Firth of Forth yielded 30 million oysters a year.
  • The hedgerows looked greener and the sunshine was glittering off the Firth of Forth. For Love or Money
  • A ride along the coastal path on the Firth of Forth will blow away any winter cobwebs. Times, Sunday Times
  • The weather in the Firth of Forth that day was night was described by Forth Coastguards as horrendous with gales, rough seas and freezing temperatures.
  • The view across the Firth of Forth to East Lothian is expansive, from North Berwick Law in the distance to the impressive Bass Rock jutting out of the Forth.
  • A professor of microbiology at the university discovered the bacteria earlier this year growing on fucus seaweed in the Firth of Forth.
  • A ride along the coastal path on the Firth of Forth will blow away any winter cobwebs. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is hidden away and surrounded by park land and woods, with views to the north over Dunbar to the Firth of Forth.
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