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Ground swell   /graʊnd swɛl/   Listen
Ground swell

noun
1.
An obvious change of public opinion or political sentiment that occurs without leadership or overt expression.
2.
A broad and deep undulation of the ocean.  Synonym: heavy swell.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Ground swell" Quotes from Famous Books



... a bit of use his trying to get the better of me in that way. I should simply laugh at the worst ground swell he can produce. I hope he will ask me out yachting. I should like to have a nice long day alone with Mr. Meldon. He's a ...
— The Simpkins Plot • George A. Birmingham

... nothing in a name. Mr. Frost was a round, genial personage and only biting with occasional sarcasms; then, it is true, his sentences cut like a rawhide. He was big, breezy, careless, quick, and coming of an aquatic ancestry, oceanic in his sort; even his walk reminded one of a ground swell. And yet he was defective as a candidate. The House members liked him well, despite those verbal acridities which shaved the surface of debate as lawns are shaven by a scythe; but with the last word there existed no ...
— The President - A novel • Alfred Henry Lewis

... encounter a heavy ground swell; but the breeze is in their favour, and, with the sail set, they are able to keep steadily before it. They have no trouble in making their course, as the sky is clear, and Sarmiento—an all-sufficient guide-post—always visible. But although ...
— The Land of Fire - A Tale of Adventure • Mayne Reid

... line of his course. It may be well to explain to some of our readers, that, though the surface of the ocean may be like glass, as sometimes really happens, it is never absolutely free from the long, undulating motion that is known by the name of a "ground swell." This swell, on the present occasion, was not very heavy, but it was sufficient to place our young mate, at moments, between two dark mounds of water, that limited his view in either direction to some eighty or a hundred yards; then it raised him on the summit ...
— Jack Tier or The Florida Reef • James Fenimore Cooper

... meantime the ground swell that followed each submersion resembled a tidal wave as it rolled down upon us and threatened to engulf us. But the Ancon rode like a duck—I can not consistently say swan in this case,—and heaved to starboard and to larboard ...
— Over the Rocky Mountains to Alaska • Charles Warren Stoddard



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