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going ashore

NOUN
  1. debarkation from a boat or ship

How To Use going ashore In A Sentence

  • The crew made a distress call after their 47 foot yacht started dragging its anchor and was in danger of going ashore onto the rocks.
  • Here the pairs rub bills and coo to each other before mating and going ashore to lay the eggs.
  • Before going ashore, secure hatches and lock all portholes and doors.
  • Next day when Alf is going ashore again he finds that his exploit has earned him free sampan passage: You all right. “. . .all his race rose up before him in a mighty phantasmagoria. . .”
  • Online, Stowe has chronicled plenty of drama — wild storms, exotic sealife and his girlfriend, Soanya Ahmad becoming pregnant and going ashore — even as he mixes in shout-outs to sponsors who make his isolation possible. Internet opens up sponsorship door for world explorers
  • Agent: Remember to inform your crew about going ashore with Landing Permits. This is the regulation of Rotterdam Port.
  • That meant around 20,000 passengers going ashore - almost overwhelming the town. The Sun
  • The crew made a distress call after their 47 foot yacht started dragging its anchor and was in danger of going ashore onto the rocks.
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