sandward

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English

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Etymology

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From sand +‎ -ward.

Adjective

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sandward (not comparable)

  1. Facing or moving toward the sand.
    • 1950, David Divine, The King of Fassarai, New York: Macmillan, page 66:
      The door dropped and the sergeant led his men forward in a stumbling rush through three feet of shallow and up the softness of the beach. They dropped on the sandward side of the logs.

Adverb

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sandward (not comparable)

  1. Toward or onto the sand.
    • 1835, George Darley, Nepenthe: A Poem in Two Cantos, London: Elkin Mathews, published 1897, page 44:
      Now while this keen air renews,
      On my strength its aim pursues,
      From that old sand-swallowed Isle
      Meroe, doubled by the Nile,
      Balking before whose watery bar
      Vainly Simoom his dragon cheers,
      That sandward home from Senaar
      Back on his stormy rider rears;
    • 1951, Joseph Auslander, Audrey Wurdemann, chapter 10, in The Islanders[1], New York: Longmans, Green & Co, page 75:
      The empty table, the glass turned down, were as lonesome as a house shuttered up for a season, as lonely and lonesome as a beached ship drawn sandward and trestled for repair.
    • 1956 May, Rufus King, “Let Her Kill Herself”, in The Saint Detective Magazine:
      In his mind’s eye he projected a picture of the coming daybreak, of a lone figure in her swim suit of flamingo, bravely defenseless in all this emptiness, with eyes cast sandward in a search for shells.