Shore
in sentence
871 examples of Shore in a sentence
For example, garbage discharge, something you would think just simply goes away, but the laws regulating ship discharge of garbage actually get weaker the further you are from
shore.
Getting closer to shore, where we are, this was in fact taken in the Galapagos.
What people don't think about is: What if the oil had made it safely to
shore?
Then there was the congregation who had left their usual church building on the
shore
to hold a service in the hills.
My mama told me long ago Ain't nobody's ever gonna tell me to abandon my old friend Happy days, walking on the
shore
Happy days, walking on the
shore
Happy days, walking on the
shore
Ain't nobody's ever gonna tell me to abandon my good memories at all I've seen so many pretty things They don't mean a thing now Listen to the song My mama told me long ago Ain't nobody's ever gonna tell me to doubt my good old days Happy days, walking on the
shore
Happy days, walking on the
shore
Happy days, walking on the
shore
Ain't nobody's ever gonna tell me to abandon my good memories at all Abandon my good memories at all Abandon my good memories at all (Music ends) (Applause) Thank you.
But I interviewed one of the women, who had been bitten on the breast by one of these dogs, and the ferocity and strength of her was incredible, and she's out right now in another resistance camp, the same resistance camp I'm part of, fighting Line 3, another pipeline project in my people's homelands, wanting 900,000 barrels of tar sands per day through the headwaters of the Mississippi to the
shore
of Lake Superior and through all the Treaty territories along the way.
And a month ago, the 23rd of September, I stood on that
shore
and I looked across to that long, long faraway horizon and I asked myself, do you have it?
In Ontario, the boreal marches down south to the north
shore
of Lake Superior.
And so for animals that come to the surface to breathe, such as this elephant seal, it's an opportunity to send data back to
shore
and tell us where exactly it is in the ocean.
And then at some period of time it pops up to the surface and, again, relays that data back to
shore.
On the left is water coming through the shore, taken from a NASA satellite.
And then, once it was in the right place, he got back in the water holding a big knife, and he cut each buoy off, and the buoy popped up into the air, and the cable dropped to the sea floor, and he did that all the way out to the ship, and when he got there, they gave him a glass of juice and a cookie, and then he jumped back in, and he swam back to shore, and then he lit a cigarette.
And then once that cable was on shore, they began to prepare to connect it to the other side, for the cable that had been brought down from the landing station.
And then the process on
shore
takes around three or four days, and then, when it's done, they put the manhole cover back on top, and they push the sand over that, and we all forget about it.
These initiatives cost less than a missile, and certainly less than any soldier's life, but more importantly, it takes the war to their homelands, and not onto our shore, and we're looking at the causes.
Now coastal countries have authority over 200 nautical miles from
shore.
The first is the geophony, or the nonbiological sounds that occur in any given habitat, like wind in the trees, water in a stream, waves at the ocean shore, movement of the Earth.
I was walking along the
shore
in Alaska, and I came across this tide pool filled with a colony of sea anemones, these wonderful eating machines, relatives of coral and jellyfish.
I want to tell you about Omar, a five-year-old Syrian refugee boy who arrived to the
shore
on Lesbos on a crowded rubber boat.
So thank you. (Applause) It's the fifth time I stand on this shore, the Cuban shore, looking out at that distant horizon, believing, again, that I'm going to make it all the way across that vast, dangerous wilderness of an ocean.
We haven't reached that other shore, and still, our sense of pride and commitment, unwavering commitment.
And now, the
shore
is coming.
If she can't talk when she gets to the shore, she's going to be pissed off."
Look at the waves coming near the
shore.
I grew up a feral, adopted child on the northern
shore
of Lake Ontario, following my bricklayer/fisherman father around.
As the medieval knight Antonius Block returns from the wild goose chase of the Crusades and arrives on the rocky
shore
of Sweden, only to find the specter of death waiting for him, Mr. Teszler sat in the dark with his fellow students.
This is back in 1964, when the technical managers have suits and ties and NRK rolled all its equipment on board a ship, and 200 meters out of the shore, transmitting the signal back, and in the machine room, they talked to the machine guy, and on the deck, they have splendid entertainment.
I didn't know if I was drifting out to sea or towards shore, and all I could really make out was the faint sound of seagulls and crashing waves.
Imagine yourself standing on a beach, looking out over the ocean, waves crashing against the shore, blue as far as your eyes can see.
There are big waves and small waves, waves that crash on the
shore
one right after the other, and waves that only roll in every so often.
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