brutus
The plural for tide is, tides.
When ocean waters are at their highest point, it is known as high tide, and when they are at their lowest point, it is known as low tide.
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.
A state of affairs is the current set of circumstances, so a regrettable state of affairs would be disappointment with the current set of circumstances.
Marc Antony in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.
A Tide in the Affairs of Men - 1913 was released on: USA: 18 August 1913
The cast of A Tide in the Affairs of Men - 1913 includes: Helen Armstrong as Little Jessie - as a girl George Periolat as Vivenot - the Miser Vivian Rich as Jessie, as an adult
Yes, there is. Which, if taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. (Julius Caesar, Act IV, Scene 3)
This quote is from the play "Julius Caesar" by William Shakespeare. The character Brutus says this line, referring to the idea that there are pivotal moments in life when one must take decisive action.
Qaboos bin Said Al Said is the Minister of Foreign Affairs for Oman.
Men have affairs for various reasons. It usually is caused by intimacy or communication issues that occur in their marriage.
Some of the best tide watches for fishermen are Casio Men's SPF 40 - 1V Sea Pathfinder Tide Watch and Nixon's Tide Watches. Moreover, Casio ProTrek with Tide and Moon Data is one of the best tide watches for fishermen.
The Quote is "A Rising tide floats all boats." and It was JFK Actually, it was: a rising tide lifts all the boats (1963)
It depends on what you are fishing for and where. Normally the fish come in when the tide does and when the tide goes out so do the fish. It is said that when the tide is dead high or dead low its not very good fishing, but fish can be caught in those situations. We normally look at the tide charts and catch the tide when it is coming in, up to the point of full tide.
You know what a tide is, don't you? Twice a day, the level of the sea rises and lowers because of the gravitational pull of the moon. When the water rises it's called flood tide and when it lowers, leaving tidal pools and shallows behind, it's called ebb tide. You want to launch your ship when it is high tide or flood tide because there is lots of water to go under it; at ebb or low tide the water is shallow and the ship could bottom out. Shakespeare, or rather Brutus in his play Julius Caesar, is comparing our fortunes with the tide. When the tide is high, it's time to set sail. It's rather like "make hay while the sun shines" or "strike while the iron is hot" or "he who hesitates is lost".
selectmen
"George (Harrison) had hundred's of affairs" as Beatle expert Bill Harry once said.