<span class="searchmatch">end</span>-<span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> (not comparable) Of or relating to the last part of air exhaled from the lungs at the <span class="searchmatch">end</span> of an exhalation breath, having the highest concentration...
cattle or the weather, then you'll soon be submerged beneath a fast-flowing terminological <span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> wave. pierhead line the <span class="searchmatch">end</span> of a pier farthest from shore...
extinguish its fire—until lock gates up-river at Barcombe gave way and a <span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> wave rolled down the valley meeting head-on a spring tide rolling up from...
Wikipedia From Middle English Humber, from Old English Humbre. Humber A large <span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> estuary forming part of the boundary between the East Riding of Yorkshire...
London: Heinemann, page 102: In another moment a huge wave, like a muddy <span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> bore, but almost scaldingly hot, came sweeping round the bend up-stream...
titlo, tittle, and titulus. IPA(key): /ˈtaɪ.təl/ Rhymes: -aɪtəl Homophone: <span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> (in accents with flapping) Hyphenation: ti‧tle title (plural titles) The...
upon it. the slack of a rope or of a sail take in the slack (countable) A <span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> marsh or shallow that periodically fills and drains. (uncountable, psychotherapy)...
from Proto-Germanic *pullaz (“pool”), via either Old English pull, pyll (“<span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> pool”) or Old Norse pollr. Cognate with Breton poull, Irish and Scottish...
S-A node sinoatrial node sinus node stem node subnode supernode tacnode <span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> node Virchow's node knot nodal noded nodule → Irish: nód knot, knob, protuberance...
comparable) Coming (or about to come) in; arriving. Incoming tides cause a <span class="searchmatch">tidal</span> bore in many rivers. 1961 January, “Talking of Trains: The Severn Bridge...