different between inshore vs noshore

inshore

English

Adjective

inshore

  1. Close to (especially in sight of) a shore.
  2. (of a wind) Blowing from the sea to the land.

Translations

Adverb

inshore

  1. Near the shore.
    • 1875, William Henley, Notes on the Firth:
      The sunset's roses faint and fain decline.
      Inshore the still sea shimmers scale on scale,
      Like an enormous coat of magic mail —
      Sheet silver shot with tremulous opaline.
  2. Towards the shore.

Translations

See also

  • deep-sea
  • offshore
  • insure
  • ensure

Anagrams

  • Horines, heroins, hierons

inshore From the web:

  • what's inshore fishing
  • inshore what means
  • what does inshore fishing mean
  • what does inshore mean
  • what is inshore traffic zone
  • what is inshore fishing rod
  • what are inshore waters
  • what does inshore rod mean


noshore

English

Etymology

no +? shore

Adjective

noshore (comparative more noshore, superlative most noshore)

  1. Not on the shore (such as drilling for oil in the ocean).
  2. Not having a shore; shoreless.
  3. (business) Pertaining to virtual business operations or services conducted outside the country, in an adjacent country where there is no shore between the countries, or conducted independent of a geographical location.

Quotations

  • 1974. Consumer energy act of 1974: Hearings, Ninety-third Congress, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Commerce, page 1658.
    The costs of exploring offshore areas and Alaska are about ten times the typical noshore drilling.

Derived terms

  • noshoring

Related terms

  • inshore
  • offshore
  • onshore

Anagrams

  • Honores, heroons, onshore, sorehon

noshore From the web:

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