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Definition of Tide rip
1. Noun. A stretch of turbulent water in a river or the sea caused by one current flowing into or across another current.
Definition of Tide rip
1. Noun. A body of water made rough by the conflict of opposing tides or currents. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tide Rip
Literary usage of Tide rip
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Tide of Immigration by Frank Julian Warne (1916)
"CHAPTER XV TWO VIEWS OF THE TIDE-RIP "!T is certainly not fair or just to the
American workingman or to those who have come here some years ago that a newly ..."
2. The Tide of Immigration by Frank Julian Warne (1916)
"CHAPTER XV TWO VIEWS OF THE TIDE-RIP "IT is certainly not fair or just to the
American workingman or to those who have come here some years ago that a newly ..."
3. In the Andamans and Nicobars: The Narrative of a Cruise in the Schooner by Cecil Boden Kloss (1903)
"On its western side, a tide-rip—to which the chart ascribes a strength of 5 knots
an hour at times—caught us, and we were in some danger of being carried ..."
4. The Annual of Scientific Discovery, Or, Year-book of Facts in Science and Art by David Ames Wells, Charles Robert Cross, John Trowbridge, Samuel Kneeland, George Bliss (1851)
"But this evidently could not have been a ' tide- rip' caused by a current, ...
Might not this extraordinary 1 tide-rip ' have been caused by the throes of a ..."
5. Adventure in New Zealand from 1839 to 1844: With Some Account of the by Edward Jerningham Wakefield, Robert Stout (1908)
"... and food—Boat expedition—Tide-rip —Jack Guard—His perilous adventures in
1834—HMS Alligator— Port Gore—Admiralty Bay—Wild cattle—Estuary of the Pelorus— ..."
6. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the District Courts of the United by United States District Court (New York), Robert Dewey Benedict, United States District Court (Vermont) (1871)
"In attempting to enter such a tide-rip, with a vessel at anchor, as the Figlia
... The tide-rip was plainly to be seen, and its course, and character, ..."
7. Adventure in New Zealand by Edward Jerningham Wakefield (1845)
"... whale-boats—Wretched houses and food—Boat expedition—Tide-rip—Jack Guard—His
perilous adventures in 1834—HMS Alligator—Port Gore—Admiralty Bay- Wild ..."