释义 |
sea-bank [bank n.1] 1. †a. The sea-coast or sea-shore; = bank n.1 9.
c1350[see bank n.1 9]. c1450St. Cuthbert (Surtees) 5173 To þe see bank þe cors þai bring. 1604Shakes. Oth. iv. i. 138, I was the other day talking on the Sea-banke with certaine Venetians. 1794Mrs. Radcliffe Myst. Udolpho xvi, My music leads to lotty groves, That wild upon the sea-bank wave. b. A dune or sand-hill.
1848Clough Amours de Voy. 89 The cypress-spires..Ever more growing,..Over the low sea-banks, of the fatal Ilian city. 1865Swinburne Chastelard i. ii. 31 The next [star], that saw not love, saw me Between the sea-banks and the sea. c. A sand-bank; = bank n.1 5.
1828Fleming Brit. Anim. 191 This fish [the cod]..is eagerly sought after on those sea-banks which it frequents. d. attrib.
a1593Marlowe Ovid's Eleg. i. i. 34 Elegian Muse..Girt my shine browe with Sea-banke Mirtle praise [read sprays]. 2. An embankment built for protection against the sea, a sea-wall.
1647Hexham i, The Sea-bankes, De Zee-dijcken. 1655Marquis of Worcester Cent. Invent. §96 A way to make a Sea⁓bank so firm..that a stream can have no power over it. 1733Act 6 Geo. II, c. 37 §5 If any Person..shall unlawfully and maliciously break down..any Sea Bank. 1839Civ. Engin. & Arch. Jrnl. II. 450/1 A Sea Bank constructed..for the purpose of enclosing a quantity of sea marsh land. attrib.1852J. Wiggins Embanking 64 The execution of sea⁓bank work. So sea-banking, the building of sea-banks.
1852J. Wiggins Embanking 2 Sea-banking, or sea-walling, has hitherto formed but a small portion of the practice of Engineers. |