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Tidewater

[ US /ˈtaɪdˌwɔtɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the coastal plain of the South: eastern parts of Virginia and North Carolina and South Carolina and Georgia

How To Use Tidewater In A Sentence

  • Avey had heard the stories from her aunt when, as a child, she spent a month each summer at Cuney's home in Tatem, one of the South Carolina tidewater islands.
  • Those from the coastal states came from the hilly, interior backcountry rather than the coastal tidewater areas.
  • You'll kayak through a maze of fjords and tidal channels and through the ice-encrusted Cordillera Darwin and the most active tidewater glaciers in the world.
  • The spring river's tidewater connects sea even, the sea bright moon the total tide living, spending a good month a circle a person family reunion, blessing a voice companion, you go.
  • Mount Garibaldi is only 20 km from tidewater at the head of Howe Sound.
  • But after discussing the plan with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other agencies, he says, regulators abandoned it because the aerators could hurt an endangered fish, the tidewater goby. Tiny Town Is Awash in Water Woes
  • The unit was noted not only for its hard-fighting abilities, but also for its varied and far-flung field of service, stretching from tidewater Virginia all the way to the plains of Texas.
  • The Virginia tidewater region and the coastal south were also settled largely by the Scots-Irish.
  • One bay had one tidewater glacier, one had two, and two had five each (College and Harriman fjords).
  • Malaria profoundly affected public health in the southern tidewater region, and it was a primary reason colonists in the Chesapeake Bay region lived shorter lives than did New Englanders.
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