This phrase is from H.W.Longfellow poem rain in summer. It means when the heavy rain flew from the top of street, it brought with it all the sand from the upside and the mud and it totally looked like a tide of a river but with full of mud.
The original phrase was "happy as a clam at high tide." Clams live in the sand beneath the ocean. When the tide goes out, they are left without any water, and have to survive on what they store in their holes. So when the tide is high, a clam is happy and has plenty of water for food and oxygen.
The tides are the result of the gravitational attraction between the water, the sun, and the moon.
It's not an idiom - ships once had to ride the tide out of harbors because they didn't have motors and had to rely on the tide and the wind to carry them along.
Yes, muddy is an adjective.
what does the phrase There`s ruin in store for you mean
Muddy tide
The phrase "brow of the tide" is not a commonly used idiom or expression. It could be interpreted as a poetic or metaphorical way of referring to the beginning or peak of the tide, where the water level is rising or at its highest point.
"Tide" here refers to a period or season. In the context of the phrase "frosty tide," it suggests a cold or wintry season.
No, the correct way to phrase this sentence is "Is the tide out?" as it is a question seeking information about the current tide level.
The word tide mean befall.
Low tide
A mud flat
The original phrase was "happy as a clam at high tide." Clams live in the sand beneath the ocean. When the tide goes out, they are left without any water, and have to survive on what they store in their holes. So when the tide is high, a clam is happy and has plenty of water for food and oxygen.
"Roll Tide" is the rallying call for the University of Alabama. Alabama's "mascot" is known as the Crimson Tide. The term Crimson Tide was coined in 1907 when Alabama played Auburn on a muddy field and stained the uniforms red. Hugh Roberts, the sports editor for the Birmingham Age-Herald, described the team as Crimson Tide because of the mud and coined the term "roll tide" to reference the way they ran onto the field (rolling like a tide). Similar to other college chants, "Roll Tide" essentially means fight on, don't give up, never surrender.
A tide that is especially weak is known as a neap tideThere are two terms/phrases that are used to describe the periods of weak tides. These terms are low tide and the phrase of "the tide is out." The opposing terms/phrases are high tide and "the tide is in."its called neapNeap tideNeap Tideneap.
IT MEAN THAT it is when i am faking that i am saying i have cool shoes and tide mean electric pipe in the ocean.
Muddy confluence