seafare
English
Verb
seafare (third-person singular simple present seafares, present participle seafaring, simple past seafared, past participle seafared or (archaic) seafaren)
- To travel or voyage by sea
- 1914, Max Pemberton, Two Women, page 88:
- […] and although it was quite understood that he would marry her sooner or later, the happy day seemed as distant as ever. He accepted Tony's offer and went to Germany to “seafare.”
- 2016, C. Simon Fan, Culture, Institution, and Development in China:
- Various Japanese governments in different dynasties attempted to restrict military groups from seafaring. However, Japan has a long coastline, and the Japanese governments had to allow fishermen to seafare for a living.
Noun
seafare (countable and uncountable, plural seafares)
Etymology 2
From Middle English seefare, equivalent to sea + fare.
Noun
seafare (plural seafares)
- A rent paid in commutation of the duty of carrying supplies or passengers by water.
- Seafood.
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