Sinônimos
Examples for "clifflike"
Examples for "clifflike"
1At this point they rose to a clifflike headland a hundred and fifty feet high, flat on top.
2There it had a wide mouth with stony clifflike gates at either side whose feet were piled with shingles.
3On the west of the plain of Champagne rises, 300 feet, with a curious clifflike suddenness, the Plateau of Sézanne.
4Perpendicular, clifflike walls shut us off from retreat to the land and there was not a possibility of shelter anywhere.
5She studied a computer-generated model of the Marine base, rotating it, judging the clifflike loom of the taller buildings, the openings in between.
1The coast of these inlets is steep and cliffy.
2He stood a second on the cliffy north wall to look down on the quiet harbor.
3At ten and three-quarter miles considerably ridgy, and passed large masses and cliffy hill, apparently of limestone.
4Then it moved forward again, and passed over the cliffy end of the glacier into the pine-clad valley.
5At the upper end of the inlet, its low, cliffy lining sinks, at both sides, into a beach.
6Rounding Point Cunningham, they anchored near a red cliffy head, called by Captain King "Foul Point."
7They came about in mid-channel and lay some hours with lowered sail in the lee of a cliffy island.
8Prom the vast boss which constitutes the lower portion of Monte Rosa cliffy edges run upward to the summit.
9Here we were again stopped for some time, finding a way by which we might ascend the cliffy sides.
10It was rather high and cliffy; but there was nothing by which to judge of its connection with the main.
11The headlands project boldly far into the sea; in front lie several islands, and behind dark forests and the cliffy Apennines.
12The coast from Waldegrave's Isles to Point Drummond runs waving in a south-eastern direction, and forms bights and broad, cliffy heads.
13In places it forms a basset, or outcrop, cresting the summit; and the eastern flank is cliffy, like that of the Tebribi.
14The American Fall will then be transformed into a dry precipice, forming a simple continuation of the cliffy boundary of the Niagara gorge.
15This proved to be a cape, composed of three cliffy points, near the northern part of which lay a cluster of black rocks.
16Many little rivers run from all sides in cliffy valleys; and one of them, a few miles from Monastier, bears the great name of Loire.