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overside
[ oh-ver-sahyd ]
adverb
- over the side, as of a ship.
- on the opposite side (of a phonograph record):
Overside we are given an example of early Ellington.
adjective
- effected over the side of a ship:
overside delivery of cargo.
- placed or located on the opposite side (of a phonograph record):
The overside selections are more agreeably sung.
noun
- the opposite side (of a phonograph record):
On the overside we have a potpourri of Strauss waltzes.
overside
/ ˈəʊvəˌsaɪd /
adverb
- over the side (of a ship)
Word History and Origins
Origin of overside1
Example Sentences
Captain Prince answered the hail of a British ship, ordered his longboat overside, and he and Nat went to present their papers to the British captain.
"She was an experienced sailor and I suppose we are all still wondering how on earth she happened to get washed overside and why she wasn't tethered on."
Roused up, despairing in that gloom, I thought: ‘Should I go overside for a quick finish or clench my teeth and stay among the living?’
Sallie climbed the rail, and, having found a coil of rope within one of the two life-boats there, was letting that gently overside when another shadow joined her.
I made my way round crates and barrels on that untidy deck, which had a thick mud of coal dust and snow, to the ladder overside.
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