sealike

English

Alternative forms

  • sea-like

Etymology

From sea + -like. Compare Old English sǣlīc (of the sea).

Adjective

sealike (comparative more sealike, superlative most sealike)

  1. Resembling a sea or some aspect of one.
    • 1970, Merle Elliott Brown, Wallace Stevens; the poem as act
      As muffled, cloudy sounds envelop "On the Manner of Addressing Clouds," so the sealike sounds of lines like "Ubiquitous concussion, slap and sigh," []

Anagrams

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