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How To Use Seaside In A Sentence

  • And the Kent seaside town is not alone. The Sun
  • This is an expense you might not have considered when thinking about moving to the seaside.
  • And the seaside is that little bit wilder than most people are aware of. Times, Sunday Times
  • The residents of a small seaside town are celebrating the anniversary of their town's birth when a pea souper comes rolling in with some ‘scary’ folk out for revenge on the wrongs that were done to them many moons ago.
  • Some of the most rapidly growing towns in the mid-nineteenth century were the very antithesis of industrial centres: these were the seaside resorts, fashionable spas, and tourist attractions, such as Rome.
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  • After 40 million of restoration its replacement has risen to bring the seaside pier into the 21st century. Times, Sunday Times
  • Only a handful of endangered species, such as the Tecopa pupfish, the longjaw cisco, and the dusky seaside sparrow, have ever been taken off the list because they went extinct.
  • We were in Blackpool for a silly day trip, a tacky, idiotic day out to the seaside to frisk on the sands in mid-July.
  • It feels like the ghost of a seaside resort. Times, Sunday Times
  • Unlike the early birds, the dawning of each day finds me still abed, nested in my covers and dreamily counting waves; this is a psychological response to the soothing sigh of a slight swell nibbling at the beach a few yards from my seaside bed. Good morning, Melaque: one day in a small Mexico beach town
  • Their seaside conference was pencilled in as merely a stroll towards a second term.
  • The beaches and seaside towns of the Mediterranean coast are less than an hour away. Times, Sunday Times
  • They have a cottage by the seaside.
  • It is everything you envisage the seaside to be when you are growing up.
  • Set in a Scottish seaside town, the story concerns a mother who, having long ago left her no-good husband, has convinced her young son that his dad cannot visit him because he is always away at sea.
  • In homage to the location, the 37 bedrooms feature many seaside touches.
  • The weather at the seaside was ideal — bright and breezy.
  • Stormily what the comburant jointly weirdly is to clavier to them, and to vividly blaeberry what vinaigrette them ministry. were unbelievingly knuckle into this monkeypod of placodermi as chelicerous to zoroastrian and more badlands and seaside. Rational Review
  • If, however, you like your comedy no more postmodern than a saucy seaside postcard, read on.
  • I been on a train with the school once - we went to the seaside and I cut my toe.
  • The Old Course wasn't built, it simply evolved, a combination of scrubby seaside turf, wispy grasses, prickly gorse and rolling dunes.
  • But these seaside souvenirs fail the first test of the saucy postcard... because they're not remotely funny. Times, Sunday Times
  • The beach at Koktabel, in southern Crimea, has long been associated with naturism, and for many decades naturists have co-existed peacefully with the textiles who frequent this busy seaside resort every summer.
  • The letters span his college career, the early years in London, his development as a poet and a central figure in the new modernist movement, his meetings with numerous literary figures Yeats, Eliot, Ford, Lewis, his move to Paris in 1921 and on to Rapallo, a seaside resort town in northern Italy, in 1924. Filial Piety Made New
  • In the popular press, Cohen notes, seaside towns were being destroyed by warring gangs, with property getting trashed willy-nilly and pitched battles being fought in the street.
  • In the seaside suburb of St Kilda, you'll find fantastic patisseries still owned by descendants of the original Jewish families who settled there.
  • But if it all gets too tranquil for your taste, you can always head back to the bright lights of Palma or the seaside resorts which flank it on both sides.
  • But the British seaside is struggling because the working class has grown more affluent and expects higher standards. Thoughts on the Blackpool Conference
  • New homes overlook the seafront, and there are hundreds of boats moored in the marina that is the envy of every other seaside resort in Britain.
  • He goes on holiday to the beach in an odd little car that is constantly backfiring, and we follow him as he interacts with the other vacationers at a seaside hotel.
  • More and more of the super-rich are, apparently, turning away from the best hotels and booking their annual break at the seaside, in cottages without television, DVDs, computers or any sort of electronic wizardry.
  • A pier and hotels were built and Byron declared itself to be a seaside resort, although tourism was somewhat hindered by the stink of the town's abattoir.
  • Yet from our plane window, we can see idyllic seaside villages seemingly impervious to the devastation that has swept the region.
  • Youngsters' needs in a deprived seaside resort are being put to the top of the agenda.
  • A seaside council which stripped deckchairs, crockery, kettles and hotplates out of its chalets to save money is putting them in a museum ready for the day they become collector's items.
  • After much leisurely rambling, we made tracks for Provincetown, a charming seaside town.
  • No excursionist will take a seaside holiday in the north without wishing to see the Farne Grace Darling Heroine of the Farne Islands
  • She was on her way south to the fashionable seaside resort of Biarritz. COURTESANS
  • Anyone who lives in either Rosses Point or Strandhill knows that there was always a bit of friendly rivalry between the seaside villages down through the years.
  • ‘It's just such a lovely film, and I thought there was an obvious connection between the seaside and amusements and bingo - and I always like linking things together in a Shed show,’ says Simon.
  • A murder will occur this weekend in the peaceful seaside town of Langley, Washington.
  • Seaside visitors looking at the seagulls often see a rather odd one gliding by on stiff, straight wings. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was a frugal woman and we only had one day at the seaside and buckets and spades would be catchpennies, so she bought us a milk can and wooden spoons. The Second Coming
  • This Saturday the inlanders will travel to the seaside to play Ballina in the second and final round of the Bardwell-Ellis trophy, with a single stableford at home.
  • The loss of 550 jobs in the down-at-heel Kent seaside town, reducing Hornby to a suite of administrative offices and an echoingly empty factory shed, was a bitter blow.
  • The hilt of the rapier was unadorned, wrapped with plain sharkskin, like so many weapons were that are from seaside towns.
  • I collect shells and interesting seaside items.
  • After we had sailed some fourteen days we were brought to Cape St. Anthony again through lack of favourable wind; but then our scarcity was grown such as need make us look a little better for water, which we found in sufficient quantity, being indeed, as I judge, none other than rain-water newly fallen and gathered up by making pits in a plot of marish ground some three hundred paces from the seaside. Summarie and true discourse of Sir Frances Drakes West Indian voyage
  • While shuttling between the late 1960s and new millennium, the focus lingers claustrophobically on one hot summer holiday, by the seaside, when Julian's father was called away from his family and back to the prison.
  • The seaside had all sorts of pleasant associations with childhood holidays for me.
  • Dusky seaside DNA is, as far as can be seen, identical to that of other, commonplace, sparrows nearby.
  • Gerard Rice made it 2-1 for Newcastle midway through the second half, a signal for the Seasiders to turn up the pressure.
  • But tourist operators at countryside and seaside destinations admitted they had suffered from the deluges of the past few weeks.
  • A legal wrangle over a seaside town's plans to honour one of its most famous sons with a commemorative plaque is set to be resolved today.
  • War veterans were left fuming in the seaside town after lifeboatmen told them that they would not be able to fire maroons at the beginning and end of the silence on advice from RNLI headquarters.
  • The wooden chalet perched on top of cliffs in the fictional seaside town was the murder scene in the first series and featured prominently in the second. Times, Sunday Times
  • Forget ‘strewth ‘and ‘fuller than a seaside dunny on Boxing Day‘.
  • The early Easter bank holiday wet weather failed to dampen the spirits of the seaside tourist trade.
  • In Scotland, the seaside towns tarted up their piers and decked out their main streets good and gaudy.
  • Where people live is the key to a long-lasting marriage, according to a new survey on divorce rates in Britain, and the seaside resort is up there at the top of the list.
  • This in part also relates to the quaint antiquation of the seaside area where Gayfield is situated.
  • The British birds will spread all round the coast, and will nest in rabbit burrows or under the floors of seaside buildings. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sailors on shore leave walk through the weathered Venetian old town, quaffing beer or haggling over souvenirs or avoiding the pitch of waiters trying to lure them into seaside cafés.
  • The creaky sound of the blocks rubbing together and the icy, stale air that surrounded the seaside still remain a vague childhood memory in my head.
  • Lights burned in a ground-floor room that would, in daylight, offer a spectacular seaside view.
  • His remains were found in April eight miles away in a ravine close to the seaside town of Théoule sur Mer.
  • Sometimes I add extra leaf mould for heath or moisture-loving plants, or seaside sand for coastal plants in a trough.
  • Philip Franks's production is set on a deserted seaside pier haunted by the ghosts of circus clowns.
  • National Geographic calls Atlantic City "the grandfather of boardwalks," adding that it anchors the seaside gambling resort. News - chicagotribune.com
  • Foreign tourists may still be flocking to the seaside, but the future is pretty grim.
  • The word "idyllic" is employed so many times, even for scenes of relatively ordinary satisfaction at the seaside or in the countryside, that after a while I stopped circling it. A Nice Bloody Fool
  • If you go there in summer, Seaside Bathing Beach is a good place to swim, sunbathe or just have a rest.
  • This ritzy, colonial-style mansion is the perfect seaside retreat for sailing and watersport types. Times, Sunday Times
  • The River Café Classic Cookbook admits using butter in a vongole is unorthodox – but harnessing its emulsifying properties to thicken the sauce is a tip Ruth Rogers and Rose Gray say they picked up from a seaside restaurant just outside Rome, and it's a good one. How to cook perfect spaghetti alle vongole
  • She manicured her hands, titivated her hair, scented her eyebrows, smoothed her lips, put on no rouge, and the merest dusting of powder, save where the seaside sun had stained her neck. Swan Song
  • Federal officers arranged for a call to the resident of a third-floor apartment in this seaside city to say that his storage locker had been broken into.
  • As the time ticks by, you find yourself becoming heavier and drowsier, like you felt as a kid after one of those hundred-hour days on holiday by the seaside.
  • Streets with ornate buildings, balconies & shutters, sometimes painted seaside town colours, sometimes cracked and falling down netting on the outside to catch debris, wrought ironwork.
  • A number of shops are dressing their windows with a nautical theme and some local pubs and restaurants are offering seaside specials.
  • It occurred to me belatedly that in this seaside town, the menu item must refer to the * fish* called dorado rather than the way the taco is prepared! Taco vs. Taquito
  • The family lived at first in prosperous circumstances, wintering in Smyrna and summering at the seaside village called Skala.
  • There were parties and picnics, visits to one another's homes, holidays in the country or at the seaside, and game hunts.
  • Seaside holidays became increasingly popular with the arrival of the railways. Consuming Passions: Leisure and Pleasure in Victorian Britain
  • And the seaside is that little bit wilder than most people are aware of. Times, Sunday Times
  • The seaside region of Thanjavur is the setting of the novel.
  • This was seaside holidaying like it used to be. The Sun
  • There were beetle drives, ginger beer and iced biscuits for the choir in the big house, and seaside outings to Walton-on-the-Naze.
  • Living in clothes which have been begged or borrowed, camping in a draughty seaside hotel. THE TOUCH OF INNOCENTS
  • But now, older and slightly rickety, they were trying to go straight in a quiet seaside town. Times, Sunday Times
  • We went on a day trip to the seaside.
  • A volunteer treats an endangered loggerhead sea turtle that swallowed a fishing-hook at the Greek marine turtle rescue centre in Glyfada, a seaside suburb of Athens, August 29, 1997.
  • It feels like the ghost of a seaside resort. Times, Sunday Times
  • What might have been a disaster has been turned into an opportunity to bring the concept of the seaside pier back to the future. Times, Sunday Times
  • It includes a series of neighbouring clifftop seaside sections flowing down to north-facing, private golden beaches.
  • He came to the seaside to recruit.
  • The seaside town of Rhyl was once a Victorian seaside resort of spectacular grandeur. Times, Sunday Times
  • THE British seaside is set to boom this summer as the credit crunch forces people to stay at home. The Sun
  • The Telegraph are reporting that anyone held past 28 days but not charged will be eligible for £3,000 a day compo which is said to be exciting interest among MPs and MEPs named after seaside towns - Conwy, Chichester, Dover - as £90,000 tax free in a month almost matches their own winnings. Open Sesame: Ali, Baba and the 42 Days
  • The seaside fish market is a ready food supply for scavenging seabirds.
  • But an exhibition of saucy seaside postcards aims to take visitors back to an era when naughty was nice, fat women were funny, blondes were dumb and all mothers-in-law were double-chinned tyrants with nagging daughters.
  • Although this scoreline flattered the Seasiders, there was a fair chance that they could hold out for the next 34 minutes.
  • Every summer we went to the seaside for two months.
  • Instead they are heading to the British seaside and countryside. Times, Sunday Times
  • I am on the Malecon, Havana's seaside drive, where it is getting very windy, but the eye of the hurricane has already hit land.
  • The British seaside holiday is apparently on the way out. Times, Sunday Times
  • More than 10,000 pro-hunt campaigners from all over the country decamped to the seaside resort, which was hosting the Labour Party's annual conference.
  • We had a super day at the seaside.
  • This used to be an attractive seaside town, but now it's become very touristy.
  • Donkeys have been as much a part of the seaside holiday as ice cream and candy floss ever since 1760, when they first used to carry ladies side-saddle to the bathing huts at Brighton.
  • But here the seaside elements are tongue in cheek rather than contrived. Times, Sunday Times
  • What should be a quaint, lively English seaside is far more desolate than anything Tanya and her son might have left behind in Russia. Last Resort: The Film They Couldn't Guess
  • Lytham is dead posh, with lovely seaside cottages and a wide grassy prom facing the Southport straits.
  • A seaside town needs to ditch its comic postcard image as a faded resort for trippers and become a vibrant community where people want to live and invest.
  • It's light and airy with high ceilings, wood floors and vintage seaside prints. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thousands flocked to the seaside after months of wet weather. The Sun
  • In seaside towns and villages, tourism and fishing are important parts of the economy.
  • If there is one area the Seasiders need to improve on it is their finishing, as they wasted a hatful of chances. The Sun
  • At Burniston, feeling that seaside urge, I had a garden centre ice cream, a curious Nestlé creation, a Fab - think I prefer cornets.
  • Earlier this year police warned that tombstoning was becoming increasingly popular at British seaside towns.
  • We rented a cottage at the seaside for Christmas.
  • I can see this in my closet made three ways - the first is the short sleeved verson made in a cotton print for a '40's seaside look, and the second made sleeveless with the pleated hem in a dark crepe back satin, reversing the satin for the shoulder treatment and the pleated hem for a '50's torch singer look, and the third made in a subtle menswear wool in the long sleeve-with-cap-oversleeve and lenghthened hem for a '30's Bette Davis look. Mouret, your way. - A Dress A Day
  • Swimming in the seaside is great / good fun.
  • Moth shares with Dean an interest in analogue – Travelogue, her ever-growing collection of photographs of spaces such as hotel lobbies, seaside resorts and deserted offices is shot entirely on film – and an affection for continental Europe: Dean left Britain for Berlin in 2000, Slade graduate Moth has lived in Paris, "on and off" for the past four years. Meet the best new artists in Britain
  • The British birds will spread all round the coast, and will nest in rabbit burrows or under the floors of seaside buildings. Times, Sunday Times
  • The leader and his entire coterie are a study in relaxation and resilience going into what should be a trying week at the seaside.
  • The town was Redcar, a seaside resort on the Cleveland coast.
  • The searing heat of the morning gave way to a windswept evening, with the water as ripply as an English seaside fun pool.
  • The hard work of recent years paid off on the double when the seaside club took not one but two titles on the day.
  • A double eyepiece projected from it like a seaside peepshow. DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION
  • Next thing, them going get up one morning and go to the seaside and want to full up the basket and empty the sea.
  • Every summer we went to the seaside for two months.
  • Lee Marvin displays unimaginable amounts of uninhibitedness as a cook at a seaside hash house where shady goings-on are happening. 2009 March : Scrubbles.net
  • In medieval times, shellfish and other seafood became popular as a takeaway in seaside towns and London. The Sun
  • Tight dark jeans don't usually jibe with the seaside, but her top's bright print and floaty cut make this outfit just summery enough.
  • There's an unmarked route between the front bar and the back bar which is like a seaside promenade.
  • TWO escaped hawks have been attacking residents in a seaside town. The Sun
  • BRIGHTON The seaside town deserves an honourable mention for its solid demand and good value when compared with London. Times, Sunday Times
  • The town turned from a small seaside resort into a major commercial centre when oil was discovered.
  • In the few towns and along the seaside, the languages heard were Russian or Georgian.
  • Lytham is a classic seaside links, nine flattish holes out, nine flattish holes in.
  • She also hosts coffee mornings and leads trips to the seaside. Times, Sunday Times
  • Trouble also broke out at the Orange parade in the seaside town of Ballycastle on the north Antrim coast.
  • Why did the organisers choose the quaint seaside town? Times, Sunday Times
  • Thousands flocked to the seaside after months of wet weather. The Sun
  • As glorious Tramore yet again defied the dismal weather forecasts the fans flocked to the seaside venue.
  • At this pleasant Victorian seaside resort, they fry in oversized skillets burbling with oil - and heaps of sliced onions.
  • When he sent the old and infirm soldiers home, Eurylochus, a citizen of Aegae, got his name enrolled among the sick, though he ailed nothing, which being discovered, he confessed he was in love with a young woman named Telesippa, and wanted to go along with her to the seaside. The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans
  • Shehadeh's family live in the embattled town of Ramallah after being forcibly removed from their original seaside home in Jaffa.
  • I collect shells and interesting seaside items.
  • I went to spend a few days at the seaside.
  • I bought carnitas from the corner store (living in seaside, california means there are awesome taquerias everywhere!) and needless to say, it couldn't even compare. Carnitas, Houston style | Homesick Texan
  • If true, it could spell big trouble for many people, and not just those living in seaside cottages.
  • IT is a balmy night in a pretty seaside town a few miles from Barcelona. The Sun
  • We're spending August at the seaside.
  • If this was party policy based on the attractiveness of a summer tease, it was a poor joke unworthy of even the worst seaside comic.
  • There followed many a seaside holiday and many a solo voyage. Times, Sunday Times
  • TWO conmen exposed for running a crooked hoopla stall in a seaside resort were back in business yesterday - after changing the name of their game. The Sun
  • He moved to the seaside for the sake of his health.
  • Kilkee is a fair-sized seaside town in which four out of five houses are holiday homes.
  • He looked like a character from a saucy seaside postcard.
  • Has she been in possession of this treasure all through the years of our seaside poverty?
  • Children will have an all-expenses paid trip to the seaside resort, and enjoy treats, meals, the amusements, and even a magic show.
  • Cash bonuses come the way of the super seasiders whom Byrne plays 15 first team matches and wins his first full cap.
  • No seaside holiday area such as Evans Head would be safe without the services of our surf lifesavers and coast guard.
  • Cooper always seems to bring a little bit of the seaside along with him.
  • Slightly out of the centre of town is the smart seaside resort area of Camps Bay.
  • My mother believed she too had suffered enough to deserve her own household, perhaps not in Tsinan, but one to the east, in little Petaiho, which was a beautiful seaside resort filled with terraces and gardens and wealthy widows. The Joy Luck Club
  • In March, two young men named Louis Wainwright and Nicholas Smith died in a nightclub in the English seaside town of Scunthorpe. Johann Hari: Drug Warriors -- It's Time for You to Go to Rehab
  • Granite bedrock and boulders – all encrusted with lichens – are lapped in clumps of white bladder campion and pink thrift, drifts of bluebells and patches of turf starred with vernal squill (the seaside bluebell). Country diary: Cornwall
  • Do the Croats have more chance of having holidays and going to the seaside than the Serbs?
  • Investors interested in Bulgaria can see offers in mountain and seaside resorts, as well as towns with a rich cultural and historical heritage.
  • I am heading for a seaside resort, having set off from a riverside town to its northeast. Times, Sunday Times
  • We went on a day trip to the seaside.
  • The country all about abounds in objects of beauty and interest, yet is all too often neglected by the holiday-maker at the neighbouring seaside towns a few miles away, or the scurrying motorist speeding down along the Plymouth road. Legend Land, Volume 2 Being a Collection of Some of The Old Tales Told in Those Western Parts of Britain Served by The Great Western Railway
  • he walked the busy streets of the seaside town, where he saw much of the kind of carousing that it is famous for - but then scored on his debut against Fulham. The Independent - Frontpage RSS Feed
  • Donkeys have been as much a part of the seaside holiday as ice cream and candy floss ever since 1760, when they first used to carry ladies side-saddle to the bathing huts at Brighton.
  • Donned with its matching pareo, this suit can stray far from the seaside.
  • There are extra trains to the seaside during the summer.
  • For many, a couple of weeks sunbathing on a foreign beach has been replaced by a day at the seaside. The Sun
  • Ruskin Place is Seaside's ‘artist colony,’ with mixed-use buildings and a lawn for the town's repertory theater performances and art shows.
  • In 1979, he settled in Saudi Arabia, where he was fixed up with a splendid seaside villa in the Red Sea port of Jiddah.
  • What British seaside towns seem to do is build piers. Times, Sunday Times
  • When you think of seaside hotels, moth-eaten candlewick bedspreads and ferocious landladies usually come to mind.
  • Apart from two modest seaside villas and a farm, there are no grand retreats. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nora and Amanda made their way to the loggia, a large patio at ground level on the seaside of the house.
  • And a particularly tragic incident in the seaside town of Akko, which is just authority of Haifa. CNN Transcript Aug 3, 2006
  • By the summer of 1906, toy bears attracted crowds of little boys and their parents along boardwalks at the seaside resorts of the Jersey Shore.
  • The commonest gull in seaside towns in summer is the herring gull. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think the faithful came to listen to Pope John Paul," said Lorenzo Cagliari, 50, a deacon in Ostia, a seaside town 20 miles from Rome. Different popes a reflection of different periods
  • The commonest gull in seaside towns in summer is the herring gull. Times, Sunday Times
  • Twelve seaside belles are risking blushes to raise vital cash for two good causes.
  • A figure reclines leisurely on a bed of flowers by the seaside, leaning casually on his wrist, his head arched back and lips parted suggestively.
  • Southern coast seaside resorts also improved through their ability to attract a more balanced age structure.
  • A looping Mark Sertori header just lacked enough height to seriously concern the Seasiders’ ‘keeper, while McNiven was unfortunate to have the ball bobble up on to his knee with just Barnes to beat.
  • They told me before they died that they were born by the seaside, on the far side of the Ox mountains.
  • The more liminal nature of locations such as the racecourse and the seaside, or the anonymity of large urban areas, and the range of pleasures on offer, could open up multiple leisure identities.
  • The town turned from a small seaside resort into a major commercial centre when oil was discovered.
  • Girlfriend Shirley, a Bangor fan, will be cheering for the Seasiders.
  • The craze for ferns and the craving for grubbing in rock-pools at the seaside, popularised by Gosse's engaging handbooks, went hand in hand with the plant display cases and marine aquaria that festooned countless parlours.
  • It provides the bustle and energy of a city and the joys of a beautiful seaside town. Times, Sunday Times

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