Which preposition to use with seashores
The great quay of Lucerne is delightful; as good as the seashore at Dieppe or Trouville.
The ideals of his heart were not political; and when he indulges himself, as he did in his latest plays, you must look for him in the wilds; whether on the road near the shepherd's cottage, or in the cave among the mountains of Wales, or on the seashore in the Bermudas.
How mysterious and charming it was to board by the seashore with somebody's grandfather!
It was divided into four sections, the right camp, the left camp, the camp of Wimereux, and the camp of Ambleteuse, the whole being about a mile in depth, and extending along the seashore for a length of about seven miles.
Isagani lived on the seashore of the opposite coast.
A person professing to be Rarey was touring Europe and teaching his manner of breaking horses, beginning at Copenhagen and following the seashore to Naples, whence he came to Rome and was received with great enthusiasm by Miss Cushman, for at that time, and while the war was in its critical stage, American lions were very rare in Rome.
The cleaning of hemp involves very severe exertion, and when it is cleaned it must usually, in Samar, be carried to the seashore on the backs of the men who raise it.
For all the seashore between Dora and Egypt (between which places the city is situated) had no good harbor, so that every one who sailed to Phoenicia from Egypt was obliged to toss about in the sea because of the south wind that threatened them.
Oh, I do believe, Arthur Miles, you've gone stark starin' mad!" "Why," he reasoned with her, "on a seashore like this there are bound to be caves; the only trouble will be to find the right one.
Curving round the seashore under the lofty, lonely, symmetrical cone of Egmont, it is a green land of soft air and many streams.