Meaning of seacoal | Babel Free
Definitions
- coal from inside the sea: mineral coal that washes up from the sea onto beaches, from which it can be collected and sold.
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coal from across the sea: mineral coal, as opposed to charcoal, in a time and place in which the former arrived by ship and the latter arrived overland (such as London in Elizabethan times). Southern-England, historical, uncountable
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coal to be used at sea: a certain class of mineral coal, especially suitable for the steam engines of ships at sea and locomotives. US, historical, uncountable
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Such coal used in foundry practice, intermixed with foundry sand or applied in a layer on its face, to modify the behavior of the molten metal. US, historical, uncountable
Examples
“October 9, 1677. "John Thompson of Setauket has a permit⟳ to go to Flushing and other parts of Long Island to search⟳ for sea-coal, of which he hath probable information."”
“[…] and then of Sea-Coal and other necessary Fewel, fit for the working or melting of these Metalls; […]”
“And the change⟳ came fast. In 1570 there was still little sign⟳ of any major divergence from the traditional use⟳ of wood as fuel. Less than forty years later, in 1607, a case brought by the Crown in the Star Chamber stated as fact that ‘sea coal’ — a name⟳ for the coal that arrived in London by ship from Newcastle — was ‘the ordinary and usual fuel … almost everywhere in every man's house’. A single generation had made the switch⟳.”
CEFR level
B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
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