Antonym: aboard. Similar words: shore, offshore, shoreline, foreshorten, short, shorts, whore, shorten. Meaning: [ə'ʃɔː] adv. towards the shore from the water.
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91. As Soap beached the craft and ushered the two ashore, Pooley viewed the place with the gravest misgivings.
92. The block of leafy branches, roots, mud, and piggybacking barnacles was boxed and hauled ashore.
93. When I got ashore I stole a small fishing boat and sailed it to the Delta.
94. So I paddled ashore in the rubber dinghy with Nina.
95. They had just negotiated a lock and it had been her turn to go ashore.
96. As the others came ashore I took stock of my new dominion.
97. On the day,(www.Sentencedict.com) they were brought ashore on the Shirley and driven to the house.
98. Having made Winter Marsh from the Crouch I anchored off a shallow bay and rowed ashore in the dinghy.
99. I was touched by the good wishes of the crew when I went ashore.
100. Step ashore to a world of pavement cafes, boutiques and the continental charm of Port Solent's fashionable shopping mall.
101. In support of the build-up of beachheads, naval ships, directed by observers ashore with assault forces, fired on shore targets.
102. Promoted lieutenant in the brig Grasshopper, he was driven ashore on the Helder in December 1811.
103. Miyako Immigration was following all the official procedures, but they had every intention of letting Loi ashore.
104. If given the go-ahead, pictures from the wreck will be sent ashore by fibre optic cable to Liverpool by satellite.
105. It was a great joy to get ashore after being cramped with our fellows, not all of them Air Force.
106. Very few of our men swam ashore, most of those who were rescued from the water being saved by small boats.
107. As far as I could remember I'd rowed ashore in a fairly direct line from Joanna to the beach.
108. Everything would have to be unloaded at anchorage on to mexeflote rafts and then brought ashore.
109. I got up before dawn and made my mooring at Fambridge while there was still water to row ashore.
110. As it was dark by now, no bullets hit them, and they began to swim ashore.
111. People were returning to their cabins after a day ashore.
112. Today was her birthday and Jane and Lucinda would soon be coming ashore, bursting with news.
113. This was just one of the many problems in getting ashore.
114. I could visualise the map, and the position of the village in relation to the coast where I had come ashore.
115. Monsters, stirred from the lightless ocean depths by the sinking of the lands, sometimes come ashore here in search of prey.
116. Battered by 50 knot winds and seven-metre seas, the Ambrosia was later washed ashore in Aberdeenshire.
117. If there had been such action, critics say, crews might have kept slicks from coming ashore.
118. My companions hurriedly dropped me off at Chateaubelair, near Richmond, leaving me to wade ashore waist deep.
119. The main force came ashore the next night and followed a strict timetable.
120. If we can go ashore we can have coffee and Tony and I can put on our anoraks.
More similar words: shore, offshore, shoreline, foreshorten, short, shorts, whore, shorten, shortly, in short, shortage, shortcut, cut short, short-term, shortened, shortening, short-lived, choreography, phosphorescent, put the cart before the horse, ash, rash, dash, ashes, cash, dashed, a share, trash, flash, clash.