[ US /ˈtaɪd/ ]
[ UK /tˈa‍ɪd/ ]
NOUN
  1. something that may increase or decrease (like the tides of the sea)
    a rising tide of popular interest
  2. the periodic rise and fall of the sea level under the gravitational pull of the moon
  3. there are usually two high and two low tides each day
VERB
  1. rise or move forward
    surging waves
    surging waves
  2. be carried with the tide
  3. cause to float with the tide
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How To Use tide In A Sentence

  • He eyed the coming tide with an absorbed attention.
  • The Eurasian and Laurentide Ice Sheets were responsible for most of the glacio-eustatic decrease in sea level (about 120 m) during the LGM. The pattern of postglacial isostatic rebound suggests that the ice was thickest over Hudson Bay. Arctic climate variability prior to 100 years BP
  • * A few of the women flipped through photos of Manou's bastide, * observing its before and after transformation. French Word-A-Day:
  • At the beginning of the protest, Aristide partisans attacked demonstrators, hitting one with a rock and shooting another.
  • The best adequacy for EA was obtained by combinations of imipenem/cilastatin or piperacillin/tazobactam, amikacin and a glycopeptide, with values reaching 99% and 94%, respectively. BioMed Central - Latest articles
  • I'm not sure what Laurie from Manly Dorm might be referring to as hate mongering (although I see that talking about secession is divisive), but I'd like to point out it's not hateful to say the Bush administration is antidemocratic, plutocratic and militarily adventuristic. American Coastopia!
  • The high tide of adaptationism floated a motley navy, but it may now be on the ebb. Adaptationism
  • The nia nucleotide sequences were compared among Fusarium species representative of different lineages.
  • No matter what the approach, drastic measures are needed to stem the latest tide of Yanqui imperialism.
  • This dominion not only extends over the open seas, but also over all creeks, arms of the sea, havens, ports, and tide-rivers, as far as the reach of the tide, around the coasts of the kingdom.
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