Coast (v. t.) |
The side of a thing. |
Coast (v. t.) |
The exterior line, limit, or border of a country; frontier border. |
Coast (v. t.) |
The seashore, or land near it. |
Coast (n.) |
To draw or keep near; to approach. |
Coast (n.) |
To sail by or near the shore. |
Coast (n.) |
To sail from port to port in the same country. |
Coast (n.) |
To slide down hill; to slide on a sled, upon snow or ice. |
Coast (v. t.) |
To draw near to; to approach; to keep near, or by the side of. |
Coast (v. t.) |
To sail by or near; to follow the coast line of. |
Coast (v. t.) |
To conduct along a coast or river bank. |
Coast |
Area where land meets the sea or ocean |
Coast |
New Zealand radio network |
Coast |
Pittsburgh Light Rail station |
Coast |
BBC documentary series |
Coast |
Brand of bar soap and body wash, currently manufactured by the Dial Corporation |
Coast Synonyms |
Seashore, Seacoast, Sea-coast |
Coast Synonyms |
Slide, Glide |
Coast Synonyms |
Synonyms: []} |
Coast Synonyms |
Synonyms: []} |
Coast Synonyms |
Synonyms: []} |
Coast (Last Name / Surname) |
Coast is the #45,804 most common last name / surname from the 2010 United States Census. The census reported that 466 people had that surname. |
Translations |
Coast in Spanish |
Example Sentence (Quote) " Everyone flocked to the coast and built. Now the hurricanes have come back, so to speak, and the population is sitting there." - Steve Lyons |
Example Sentence (Quote) " The coast of British Columbia was one of the three chief centers of aboriginal America." - British Columbia |
Example Sentence (Quote) " The coast was clear." - English proverbs (alphabetically by proverb) |