What's the difference between inland and seashore?

Inland


Definition:

  • (a.) Within the land; more or less remote from the ocean or from open water; interior; as, an inland town.
  • (a.) Limited to the land, or to inland routes; within the seashore boundary; not passing on, or over, the sea; as, inland transportation, commerce, navigation, etc.
  • (a.) Confined to a country or state; domestic; not foreing; as, an inland bill of exchange. See Exchange.
  • (n.) The interior part of a country.
  • (adv.) Into, or towards, the interior, away from the coast.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The percentage of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, i.e., eicosapentaenoic acid (20:5) and docosahexaenoic acid (22:6) was significantly low in United States inlanders with a high coronary heart disease morbidity compared with both populations in Japan with low morbidity.
  • (2) And it can make all the difference,” Lungren told the Guardian, adding, “They try to keep them in a community, living at a home or living in an apartment.” Inland is the largest of the nonprofit facilities throughout California funded by the state’s department of developmental services.
  • (3) "We should be looking instead at decentralising the system, and looking closer to home for our energy supplies, such as solar panels on homes or harnessing wind energy on the coasts, or inland," he said.
  • (4) "Heat stress, extreme precipitation, inland and coastal flooding, as well as drought and water scarcity pose risks in urban areas, with risks amplified for those lacking essential infrastructure and services or living in exposed areas," says the report, which makes this forecast with "very high confidence".
  • (5) The eldest of three siblings whose father worked for the Inland Revenue, James left school at 16 to work in a tax office herself, and in 1941 married Ernest White, of the Royal Army Medical Corps.
  • (6) John Macgregor, an aid worker who has been accompanying teams delivering food and water to Battambang, described the area as a vast inland sea where conditions are dire and malnutrition is common.
  • (7) These payments have a long history: they were introduced after the Inland Revenue imposed a cap on pensionable earnings in 1989 and they were intended to compensate people who joined the BBC in senior roles after that date and who otherwise would have received lower pension contributions from the BBC than colleagues in equivalent roles who joined before 1989.
  • (8) Alhough police on the bridge currently only carry out sporadic spot checks, border control has in effect been moved inland to the reception centres where refugees and migrants first arrive.
  • (9) The story began on 2 December with an attack by two terrorists that left 14 people dead and 22 seriously injured at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, California.
  • (10) He’s a Nyikina-Mangala man and a traditional owner of this country, about 225km inland from Broome and 86km south of Derby.
  • (11) Virus surveillance of Northern Ireland recreational waters, between April 1986 and May 1989 demonstrated widespread enteroviral contamination of coastal and inland waters.
  • (12) The mayor of the inland community of Cloncurry, near Mount Isa, says evacuating its 3,000 residents will be a last resort.
  • (13) Sir Nicholas Montagu, chairman of the Inland Revenue for seven years, joined accountancy firm PwC as an adviser in 2004.
  • (14) Devon and Cornwall Police said a 20-mile stretch of coastline - 10 miles either side of the 18-year-old's home at Newton Ferrers - has been extensively searched as well as inland areas with the help of a range of groups and emergency services.
  • (15) "Syrian security services are well aware that the coastal city of Tartous would offer easier access to Israeli operatives than would more inland locations such as Damascus.
  • (16) The area covered was Manchester, Liverpool, their suburbs, and nearby inland and coastal towns.
  • (17) Located in Queensland’s Galilee Basin, 400km inland from the reef, it will require a major rail line, which is yet to receive final approval, to transport the coal, which must then be loaded on to ships at the ports of Hay Point and Abbot Point, near Gladstone on the Queensland coast, adjacent to the southern section of the reef.
  • (18) Other TV chefs may be watching their language and wrestling with the Inland Revenue.
  • (19) He relates details of the recent digital intrusion – purportedly sparked by his decision to relocate a 1947 memorial to Soviet war dead from a park in Tallinn, which angered some ethnic Russians living in Estonia's medieval walled capital – when I visit him at his family farm, near Abja Parish , some 40 miles inland from the Gulf of Riga.
  • (20) humid warm coastal climate compared with dry cooler inland-mountain climate) is not an important factor in the etiology of tinea.

Seashore


Definition:

  • (n.) The coast of the sea; the land that lies adjacent to the sea or ocean.
  • (n.) All the ground between the ordinary highwater and low-water marks.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A total of 500 fecal droppings of crows collected from a seashore of an ocean bay and from a cemetery on a hill surrounded by a forest were examined for thermophilic campylobacters, and the Skirrow's biovars and Penner's serogroups of the isolates were determined.
  • (2) Results indicated that the Seashore test did not discriminate between subgroups of these learning-disabled children.
  • (3) Considering the average consumption of these products per one person in the seashore region and the mean values of nitrates and nitrites it was calculated that they provided daily about 3.9 mg KNO3 and 0.4 NaNo2, that is about 1.8% of nitrates and 7.7% of nitrites consumed by adults in daily food ration.
  • (4) A 3-year prospective study revealed 39 hospitalized cases of ocular injuries from seashore racketball sports.
  • (5) A group of 238 subjects with focal or diffuse cerebral lesions and a group of 112 normal comparison subjects were administered the Seashore Tonal Memory Test and the Halstead-Reitan Battery.
  • (6) "We don't want Greek seashores being transformed into cement cities that resemble Majorca and Ibiza."
  • (7) In the film, he travels the land and seashore, his painter’s kit slung over one shoulder.
  • (8) Seashore water samples collected along the coastline in Bulgaria and Rumania contained in large numbers OK serovars of V. parahaemolyticus; some of these had been isolated repeatedly over an extended time period: 01 K32, 03 K30, 03 K48, 04 K37, 04 K53, 05 K17, 05 K30.
  • (9) This study assessed the diagnostic utility of the Seashore Tonal Memory Test in detecting and localizing cerebral lesions.
  • (10) The task used in both experiments was the Seashore Tonal Memory Test.
  • (11) Paratuberculosis was studied among dairy cows and exotic deer that shared grazing areas at Point Reyes National Seashore, California.
  • (12) • Yosemite links reservations , walking , how to apply for a Half Dome permit Point Reyes national seashore Point Reyes beach.
  • (13) However, musical receptive function was slightly disturbed with tonal memory in Seashore test.
  • (14) During the investigation period from May 1986 to April 1987, the monthly isolation rate of thermophilic campylobacters in the seashore crow varied from 32.0 to 85.0%.
  • (15) This may be a sign that people are warming to the idea of eating something that has been washed up on seashores.
  • (16) Children with reading impairments (n = 24) in all age groups were found to exhibit a marked deficit in the ability to discriminate patterned pairs of tones on the Seashore Rhythm Test compared to controls (n = 26).
  • (17) Hou became Mao's personal photographer and, over 12 years, produced pictures that burnished his image and shaped the way he is seen even now: on the seashore; pensive before the Yellow river; jovial in a crowd.
  • (18) The interpretive significance of the Speech-Sounds Perception Test (SSPT) and the Seashore Rhythm Test (SRT) was evaluated through literature review and empirical investigations.
  • (19) The research specific to the incidence of ischemic heart disease (IHD) among ship's crew members, the state of medical care of sailors during the voyage and at seashore and the analysis of the causes of drafting sailors out of the ship because of health problems demonstrated the necessity of improving the existing system of follow-ups for sailors.
  • (20) For the Azores you pack a cagoule and sunglasses, your swimming gear and walking shoes, for you’re never more than a few minutes from a dramatic basalt seashore or an alluring grassy pathway.