Word Meanings - DRIFTWEED - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Seaweed drifted to the shore by the wind. Darwin.
Related words: (words related to DRIFTWEED)
- SHORER
One who, or that which, shores or props; a prop; a shore. - DRIFTBOLT
A bolt for driving out other bolts. - SHOREWARD
Toward the shore. - DRIFTPIECE
An upright or curved piece of timber connecting the plank sheer with the gunwale; also, a scroll terminating a rail. - DRIFTPIN
A smooth drift. See Drift, n., 9. - DRIFTLESS
Having no drift or direction; without aim; purposeless. - DRIFTAGE
1. Deviation from a ship's course due to leeway. 2. Anything that drifts. - DRIFTWEED
Seaweed drifted to the shore by the wind. Darwin. - DARWINIAN
Pertaining to Darwin; as, the Darwinian theory, a theory of the manner and cause of the supposed development of living things from certain original forms or elements. Note: This theory was put forth by Darwin in 1859 in a work entitled "The Origin - SEAWEED
Any marine plant of the class Algæ, as kelp, dulse, Fucus, Ulva, etc. (more info) 1. Popularly, any plant or plants growing in the sea. - DARWINIANISM
Darwinism. - DRIFT
The horizontal thrust or pressure of an arch or vault upon the abutments. Knight. (more info) drift snowdrift, Dan. drift, impulse, drove, herd, pasture, common, 1. A driving; a violent movement. The dragon drew him away with drift - DRIFTY
Full of drifts; tending to form drifts, as snow, and the like. - DRIFTWAY
See 11 (more info) 1. A common way, road, or path, for driving cattle. Cowell. Burrill. - SHORELESS
Having no shore or coast; of indefinite or unlimited extent; as, a shoreless ocean. Young. - SHORE
imp. of Shear. Chaucer. - SHORELING
See SHORLING - DRIFTWIND
A driving wind; a wind that drives snow, sand, etc., into heaps. Beau. & Fl. - DRIFTWOOD
1. Wood drifted or floated by water. 2. Fig.: Whatever is drifting or floating as on water. The current of humanity, with its heavy proportion of very useless driftwood. New Your Times. - DARWINISM
The theory or doctrines put forth by Darwin. See above. Huxley. - SEASHORE
All the ground between the ordinary highwater and low-water marks. (more info) 1. The coast of the sea; the land that lies adjacent to the sea or ocean. - LONGSHORE
Belonging to the seashore or a seaport; along and on the shore. "Longshore thieves." R. Browning. - SPINDRIFT
See MARR - SNOWDRIFT
A bank of drifted snow. - LONGSHOREMAN
One of a class of laborers employed about the wharves of a seaport, especially in loading and unloading vessels. - ADRIFT
Floating at random; in a drifting condition; at the mercy of wind and waves. Also fig. So on the sea shall be set adrift. Dryden. Were from their daily labor turned adrift. Wordsworth. - NEO-DARWINISM
The theory which holds natural selection, as explained by Darwin, to be the chief factor in the evolution of plants and animals, and denies the inheritance of acquired characters; -- esp. opposed to Neo-Lamarckism. Weismannism is an example