1. seaside - Noun
2. seaside - Adjective
3. Seaside - Proper noun
The land bordering on, or adjacent to, the sea; the seashore. Also used adjectively.
Source: Webster's dictionaryDuring the first quarter of the last century, seaside resorts became the fashion, even in those countries of Northern Europe within the minds of whose people the sea had hitherto held the role of the devil, the cold and voracious hereditary foe of humanity. Karen Blixen
Topography is one of my chief themes in my poetry...about the country, the suburbs and the seaside...then there comes love...and increasingly, the fear of death. John Betjeman
I told the Inland Revenue I didn't owe them a penny because I lived near the seaside. Ken Dodd
The pencil moved prophetic: together now men read In the fair book of nature, and find the hope they need. The wreath woven by the river is by the seaside worn, And one of fate's best arrows to its due mark is borne. Margaret Fuller
Women don't want all that. Women just want a partner who is considerate and attentive, who will spoon with them while reciting Keats, and feed them organic yogurt by candlelight on a seaside cliff at sunset. Stephen Colbert
Bognor has always meant to me the quintessential English seaside experience (before all this global warming stuff): driving in the rain to get there, walking around in the rain looking for something to do when you're there, and driving home in the rain again... Terry Pratchett