A lane at sea that is a regularly used route for vessels.
1You know her tricks better than I do in a seaway.
2Do you think you can pull an oar in a heavy seaway, Mr.
3There was no train by the seaway from Rome until night.
4A tub will float in a seaway; why shouldn't the vessel?
5The British ship drew away on our weather beam, wallowing horribly in the seaway.
6Everybody knows there was a shallow seaway cutting across the continent during the Late Cretaceous.
7Whenever there was a little seaway, it was apt to work loose in the brasses.
8To be five miles from shore in a seaway in kayaks like ours was a sensation.
9The world, rolling in her majestic seaway, heeled her gunwale slowly into the trough of space.
10Reef organisms flourished in the ancient seaway, laying the foundations for today's pan-tropical coral reef communities.
11But it's a card compass and spins so bad in a seaway there ain't no telling, anyway.
12He found his brother the island midway down the mountain, sliding under cover of winter for the seaway.
13Some rolled and puffed like tugboats in a heavy seaway, others glided by noiseless and proud as private yachts.
14A ship's yawl, being both broad and deep, is one of the safest of small boats in a seaway.
15China's recent naval exercises in the disputed seaway and the building of islands there, with military assets, has unnerved its neighbors.
16The band around the Earth, decorated with sea horses and fanciful aquatic figures, represents the seaway now completed around the globe.