Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at coromandel.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Coromandel.
Examples
-
De Monchy, who was a guest at the party in Coromandel township, is programme manager for DOC's Moehau Kiwi Sanctuary on the peninsula and knew the significance of the find.
Archive 2007-01-01 2007
-
Perhaps Holroyd was not on board the 'Coromandel' -- and then he tried to prepare himself for the contrary.
The Giant's Robe F. Anstey 1895
-
Nothing was said of any suit on this occasion; but I walked off, and went directly on board a ship called the Coromandel, on which I had had an eye, as a lee, for several days.
Ned Myers or, a Life Before the Mast James Fenimore Cooper 1820
-
_ -- Prospect a little brighter, a swell setting in from the eastward; the ship evidently working over, as we now have sixteen feet water within half our length ahead: day mild and clear, with a south-easterly breeze: all the passengers busy noting our snail-like progress: the poor Coromandel, which is fixed as a rock, affords us an excellent _land_-mark; we have slipped by her inch by inch.
Impressions of America During The Years 1833, 1834, and 1835. In Two Volumes, Volume II. Tyrone Power 1818
-
There is now here, hard and fast, an English ship called the Coromandel, which has been on the bar for the last forty days.
Impressions of America During The Years 1833, 1834, and 1835. In Two Volumes, Volume II. Tyrone Power 1818
-
The Coromandel was the jewel in the crown of the Auckland isthmus area and deserved to be protected.
-
The Coromandel is a two-hour drive east of Auckland up the Thames Coast Road, a pastoral and peaceful drive into rural New Zealand.
-
'One of' em's a-goin 'out to the "Coromandel" presently,' said a sailor in answer to his question; 'you'd better wait till the agent's down, or you may be took out to the wrong ship -- for there's two expected, but they ain't neither of 'em in yet. Ah!' as a gun was heard outside, 'that'll be the "Coromandel" signallin' now. '
The Giant's Robe F. Anstey 1895
-
It was the same in the hotel coffee-room, where some of the 'Coromandel's' passengers were breakfasting near them, and the conversation became general; after breakfast, however, Mark proposed to spend some time in seeing the place, an arrangement which he thought would lead the way to confession.
The Giant's Robe F. Anstey 1895
-
'Easily,' said Mark; 'he talks of coming by the "Coromandel" and starting about a fortnight after he wrote -- so ----'
The Giant's Robe F. Anstey 1895
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.