What's the difference between seaward and seaware?
Seaward
Definition:
(a.) Directed or situated toward the sea.
(adv.) Toward the sea.
Example Sentences:
(1) Cancer 5:349-356, 1970; R. W. Geib, M. B. Seaward, M. L. Stevens, C.-L. Cho, and M. Majumdar, Virus Res.
(2) The absence of an effect of PRLs in chum salmon fry seems to be due, at least in part, to their good osmoregulatory ability during the period of seaward migration; effects of the exogenously administered PRLs may be compensated for by other hormones responsible for their hydromineral balance.
(3) The New York Bight extends seaward some 80 to 100 miles (ca.
(4) Perhaps mine was the last generation to be brought up with the fully inflated version of this idea – that the Clyde's tradition and skills made its ships singularly good – but it was powerful while it lasted and still held sway in 1961, when the documentary Seawards the Great Ships won an unexpected Oscar and thrilled us at the cinema with its heroic depiction of Glasgow's workaday river.
(5) Lymnaea truncatula is not found on or at the seaward side of the dike, whereas it is abundant all over the marshland.
(6) Particles that escape estuaries or are discharged by rivers into the shelf region tend to travel longshoreward rather than seaward.
(7) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Views of seaward mangrove fringes showing minor (left) and extreme (right) damage in June 2016 between Limmen and MacArthur rivers, NT.
(8) This paper reports studies on the mechanisms underlying seaward orientation in hatchling turtles.
(9) The high infection percentage among adult animals and the strikingly low frequency among slaughter lambs could be explained by the characteristic management system of the marshland: In summer the sheep graze the dike and the foreland on its seaward side, and in winter the animals graze in the marshland.
(10) Turn seawards to experience the thrill of the Indian Ocean’s thunderous breakers; if you are lucky you may spy a pod of bottlenose dolphins.
(11) Its seaward position gives it great strategic value: a kind of Gibraltar at the mouth of the upper Adriatic.
(12) Seaward lies Burgh island, where Noël Coward and Agatha Christie partied in the 1920s.
Seaware
Definition:
(n.) Seaweed; esp., coarse seaweed. See Ware, and Sea girdles.