Stonehaven, Gourdon and Johnshaven are the chief ports for seaborne trade.
Some seaborne trade, chiefly coasting, is carried on at the open roadsteads of Masulipatam and Nizampatam, both in the delta.
It is an important seat of trade, where seaborne goods are transferred to and from river boats.
To-day it would be impracticable even for a victorious navy to cut off a continental State from seaborne traffic.
Then she used that control partly to destroy the seaborne trade of her enemies, and partly to send armies across the sea to attack her enemies' armies.
But Mr. Seaborne doesn't impress me as so original, so strong.
And if Seaborne goes to his room, ten to one he'll be received with growls of surly independence.
But Seaborne will be here this afternoon," urged Spence.
I am just going to see the studio of an Italian to whom Mr. Seaborne introduced me yesterday.
For all that, Seaborne paid a visit to the artist's room, and in a couple of hours' talk they arrived at a fair degree of mutual understanding.
Seaborne was just now busy with a certain period of Papal history; he talked of some old books he had been reading in the Vatican library, and revealed a world utterly strange to all his hearers.
The seaborne commerce of the country had increased enormously since the time of the Restoration.
In later times the seaborne commerce of Egypt fell, to a large extent, into the hands of the Phoenicians and Greeks.
The Phoenicians were among the first of the races who dwelt on the Mediterranean seaboard to cultivate a seaborne commerce, and to them, after the Egyptians, is undoubtedly due the early progress made in sea-going ships.
English seabornetrade obtained a firm footing in Italy and other Mediterranean countries.
South-Western Europe, whose discoveries were destined to have a most marked effect on the seaborne commerce, and consequently on the shipbuilding of the world.
Huntley in his Seaborne Trade in Virginia in Mid-Eighteenth Century, published in the Virginia Magazine of History, vol.
The Seaborne Trade in Virginia in Mid-Eighteenth Century.
At the same time he directed Generals Irving and Mudge to have their divisions prepare defenses to ward off a seaborne attack against the Barugo-Carigara-Capoocan area.
Map 4) The Allied nations had hit the Japanese from east and west and seriously interfered with their seaborne commerce.
The principal object for which the company was formed was that of making Norwich a port for seaborne vessels not exceeding ten feet draught, by opening the best and most direct line of communication between that city and the sea.
The first seabornevessel from London to Norwich port direct, the Thames steam packet, Capt.
Upon the stem of the vessel was the inscription: "This is the first seaborne vessel that was ever built in Norwich.
Nor has any one succeeded in showing that the pressure which an enemy could exert upon us through our commerce increased in effect with the volume of our seaborne trade.
It was the one corsair lying in perpetual wait beside the British lines of seaborne trade; therefore it must be taken before British shipping could be safe.
Louisbourg embodied everything they feared and hated: interference with seaborne commerce, rank popery, French domination, trouble with Acadia, and the chance of being themselves attacked.
All governments ought to give their immediate and most serious attention to this subject, as the English now threaten to usurp the whole world's seaborne commerce for themselves.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "seaborne" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.