How To Use Seashell In A Sentence

  • Gold's history as a safe haven goes back several thousand years, since it was first recognised as a currency, along with silk and seashells.
  • Stones, seashells, or fossils make good accessories.
  • The man in the ocher-colored robes sits cross-legged, eyes gently shut, palms half-open like seashells resting lightly on his knees.
  • Other crafts include basket making, palm weaving, and jewelry made from native coral and seashells.
  • Anyway, next is some mini beads, also from ELC, in seashell designs (being handwork, those will probably go on tonight while I watch House and Tuesday's CSI). Archive 2007-06-01
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  • Put the diamond in a seashell , and present it to her on the beach.
  • The little Pan creatures, symbolic of Capricornus, blow from a seashell to allude further to the submersion. The Poet Prince
  • Volumes of spidery dressed hair piled up around a seashell grip.
  • Climbing vines, seashells, and animal horns may have been the initial inspiration for this decoration.
  • She could hear the faint sound that caves made — it was like holding a seashell to your ear, only in this case the seashell was a lot bigger, and she was standing inside — and, somewhere in the distance, Glory could hear the faint, definitive plashing of water. The Warslayer
  • The pattern on a seashell is the mollusk's memories," said Oster, a professor of environmental science, policy and management and of molecular and cell biology. EurekAlert! - Breaking News
  • This top seashell has both cased aventurine as well as "Psyche" which mostly turned purple for me. woohoo! Silver Glass Class 4
  • The ceiling is hung with lamps of every shape and size, from glass floats tied with rope to whimsical creations made of seashells.
  • EXAMPLE: aeehllss is 'seashell' argh argh argh argh argh argh argh sent out a meanie email ... about me ... Gotmedown Diary Entry
  • He heard his own breathing above the tide's, a seashell roar. THE LAST RAVEN
  • It was a rope necklace with seashells woven into it, one of the shells holding a small sapphire in its opening.
  • Using palm fronds braided into long strips that are then sewn together, the island women make hats, baskets, purses, and other items, often decorating them with raffia paper and seashells.
  • a spiral chambered seashell
  • The most colorful seashell in the word , originated from South Pacific, mainly New Zealand.
  • In one corner were piles of seashells attractively packaged and framed in boxes for hanging on the wall - cowries and mitre shells, murex and spider shells.
  • One of the most ubiquitous metapatterns in nature—a pattern that follows the “Golden Ratio” called phi—is the universal spiral shape that appears in the trails made by subatomic particles, in the double-helix molecule DNA, in seashells, in the movement pattern of the heart, in tornadoes, in galaxies. The G.O.D. Experiments
  • He longs to live in its corners, stake a spot in the shade where he could build a shelter under trees blackened by summer lightning, where he would slowly find himself becoming obsessed with mapping the Fibonacci Sequence in seashells, discovering a labyrinthian beauty that he had never paid attention to but that was there all along. Red Left Hand
  • The interior is fitted out in a Polynesian theme, with timber and rattan everywhere, along with carved wooden masks, fertility dolls and seashells.
  • Scattered on the cloth are pinecones and seashells, a sand dollar, a starfish, a sea urchin.
  • Throughout the room, nothing was left unadorned - flowers, candles, and seashells were everywhere, but not to excess.
  • To give more attention to "just" aesthetic concerns would be to "endorse precisely the concept of the eighteenth-century curiosity cabinet, in which Assyrian shards, tropical seashells, a piece of Olmec jade, geodes, netsuke, an Attic oil lamp, bird of paradise feathers, and a Maori patu might lay side by side in indifferent splendour. Philosophy and Literature
  • Scientifically speaking, seashells belong to the biological phylum Mollusca.
  • The seashells, boats, birds, fishermen and nets had fascinated her, she says.
  • In one corner were piles of seashells attractively packaged and framed in boxes for hanging on the wall - cowries and mitre shells, murex and spider shells.
  • The little girl was fussing and crying, ‘But I want my shells, my shells, my seashells.’
  • Some of the spirals found in Nature include seashells, animal horns, coiled snakes and creeping vines, among other things.
  • Hearth & Home | Outdoor decorating 2010 classic profile is fresh in the fashionably light "seashell" finish. WN.com - Articles related to Green Celebrity Real Estate: Former NYC apartment of U.S. President Barack Obama for rent
  • When the press corps cranes its collective neck to get a better view, the devil turns water in the glass under the lectern to steam, then absconds with his toy piano under one arm and a seashell pressed to his glowing mouth, leaving the president who is not the president trapped in a red room. The Best American Poetry 2010
  • It sounds like a jar of small seashells.
  • Graffius plans to use seashells, pine cones and glitter this year for a "beachy" look that showcases his personal creativity. TheSunNews.com: Local
  • But, however tempestuous this is within me, it comes out as the low voice of a curiously colored seashell, which is only for those ears that are bent with compassion to hear it. American Indian Stories
  • Swimming singly or in pairs, green fish frolic among silvery seashells and white water lilies.
  • Should it be, "I'm low key like seychelles?" it makes more sense as Seychelles was once a low-key destination? .... but seashells doesn't make sense as a simile ... or am i missing something? Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
  • 'She sells seashells on the seashore' is a well-known tongue twister.
  • Women from the Fiji Islands will launch their March activities by playing drums and conch shells (huge seashells) and dancing;
  • There was no rattle, as of seashells in a jar, and nothing came rolling on to the towel.
  • He sticks the card back on the shelf, shoving it between the smiling clown figurine and the lighted seashell.
  • Musical instruments transform into birds, then seashells, Egyptian figures, fish, flowers, Greco-Roman torsos and painters' palettes. A Modern Movement Unto Himself
  • More conventionally, a sharp barrier such as gravel or crushed seashells or eggshells sprinkled around plants will stop slugs and snails in their tracks.
  • The shape of the museum is like a giant, spiral seashell - a nautilus - made of concrete.
  • It's just the museum's serene, aquatic lighting - not to mention its ongoing exhibition of seashells - that surrounds you.
  • Mr Edlestein, IBM Fellow and chief scientist of the self-assembly airgap project, said: We have managed to harness the kinds of processes we see in nature to make regular patterns – such as the layers of enamel on your teeth, or the shape of a seashell if you look under a microscope. IBM’s Snowflakes Yield Faster Chips | Impact Lab
  • The website TheyWorkForYou reveals that he "has used three-word alliterative phrases eg 'she sells seashells' 381 times in debates – well above average amongst Lords," it says. Diary
  • From hot-air balloons above the square, orchestras of children blowing on giant seashells played enthusiastic, strident antiphonies. Do Comets Dream?
  • We played in the water, searched for seashells.
  • He wore black shorts that reached down to his knees and had a seashell necklace around his neck.
  • They are cousins of seashells, but instead of having a protective shell, most of them are poisonous.
  • 'She sells seashells on the seashore' is a well-known tongue twister.
  • The kid's were looking for seashells along the beach for a project and the teacher's were simply supervising.
  • The projection from a semi-circle is reminiscent of certain forms of seashells.
  • They are cousins of seashells, but instead of having a protective shell, most of them are poisonous.
  • The grave also contained offerings such as ochre and flint tools, axes, and seashells.
  • More conventionally, a sharp barrier such as gravel or crushed seashells or eggshells sprinkled around plants will stop slugs and snails in their tracks.
  • Some are shaped like seashells or green leaves.
  • Among the Barrier Islands along the Gulf Coast in Florida, Sanibel Island is considered one of the best shelling destinations in the world -- with beaches abound with conch, scallops and lightning whelk seashells. America's Island Paradises
  • In deepest seashells that she had gathered was there to be had of all delights, mulberries, the freshest of fruit like sweet wine from the vine.
  • When just right, Muscadet, which is dry, has a hint of seashells on the nose that immediately makes us think of seafood, especially oysters. From France, a Refreshing Steal
  • And what about the seashells that decorate the classiest sandcastles? Times, Sunday Times
  • The first currency to be used this way was something called the cowrie shell, a seashell common in the Pacific and Indian oceans that was used for trading primarily in Africa and Asia. Not Your Parents’ Money Book
  • Two of the spoons illustrated have applied seashells, and the third an applied sea horse.
  • She wore a bustier clad with seashells, and her lower body was covered with fish like scales.
  • In one corner were piles of seashells attractively packaged and framed in boxes for hanging on the wall - cowries and mitre shells, murex and spider shells.
  • There was no rattle, as of seashells in a jar, and nothing came rolling on to the towel.
  • His pockets contained three pretty stones, a feather, two small seashells, and a lint-covered half-eaten pear, but no wallet.
  • After reaching the island the pair meet a young girl named Honey Rider, who is hunting for seashells.
  • I don't know how to draw the other side of the seashell ," she says. CONFESSIONS OF AN UGLY STEPSISTER
  • ‘Ocean Flowers’ featured a compelling selection of drawings, watercolors, cyanotypes, photogenic drawings, and prints of seashells, feathers and plants, primarily from England, Scotland and India.
  • A word or group of words difficult to articulate rapidly, usually because of a succession of similar consonantal sounds, as in Shall she sell seashells?
  • They are bold shapes; strong blocks of colour defined by thick black lines and veiled with subtle, intricate patterns of feathers, scales and seashells.
  • The sounds you hear in a seashell are the exact same sounds that are always being made around you, although some may be so low that either you don't hear them or you don't pay attention to them. Undefined
  • A seashell should be the crest of England, not only because it represents a power built on the waves, but also the hard finish of the men. VI. English Traits. Manners

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