Noun(1) the movement or sound of water
Verb(1) make violent, noisy movements(2) dash a liquid upon or against(3) show off(4) act in an arrogant, overly self-assured, or conceited manner
Noun(1) the movement or sound of water
Verb(1) make violent, noisy movements(2) dash a liquid upon or against(3) show off(4) act in an arrogant, overly self-assured, or conceited manner
(1) the swash of the sea(2) the swash tends to push shingle up the beach(3) However, a few years on and no longer buckling a swash with his early vigour, tough battle boy Henry died of a tummy ache.(4) Doesn't mean he cannot swash or buckle or both, but it will require additional suspension of disbelief, particularly if he has a fistfight with some muscled-up 20-year old.(5) Though I could no longer see the clam, I knew it had pushed its siphon to the surface for feeding, and it occurred to me that the hydroid, by creating an eddy in the swash , might actually help the clam obtain food.(6) The first is that the crumbling dead corals swash about in the waves - not a good place for a baby coral to survive.(7) This is succeeded by plane-bedded sands dipping gently seaward, which are produced by the swash and backwash of the waves on the beach face.(8) Ferri revealed a madcap brilliance as Katherina, while Bocca's Petruchio buckled his swashes with rare comic flamboyance.(9) When a heavy lurch came, hot water swashed up and over, a dismal howl, and well I fancy the cook and his mate will be more careful in future!’(10) Likewise ‘Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves’ to distinguish from the other films in which Errol Flynn buckled swashes and stuff.(11) A solid surf beats against the breakwater, swashing spray on the sidewalk vendors and strolling passers-by.(12) His shoes were dampened and were soaked under the freezing water which swashed around.(13) After a cacophonous ascent and destructive return to earth, it dies disconcertingly into reverberations of swashing seashore breakers, intertwined with disorientating echoes of still wailing guitars.