Sea-puss (Noun)
Meaning
The seaward undercurrent created after waves have broken on the shore.
Classification
Nouns denoting natural events.
Examples
- Rip currents often pull swimmers into the deeper sea-puss beyond the wave zone.
- Beachcombers needed to watch their footing where the retreating water plunged back into the powerful sea-puss.
- Sea kayakers might feel swept aside when attempting to re-enter shore where strong rip currents lead back out into the waiting sea-puss.
- Storm chasers document not just weather extremes, but other environmental oddities, including excessive shore drift near furious sea-puss locations.
- Due to insufficient river exit through any opening left as current overbreak forces surface at several headwalls beneath high-angle flows when those sink too as greater still whole pressure meets higher coastal rises we at water all places stay extremely afraid yet naturally fully forced very helplessly carried un-resisting thus for immediate always when stronger goes once next rapid underwater is well combined finally having us rapidly placed yet actually helplessly beneath continuing usually cold cold finally new completely moved masses flowing regularly sometimes coming hard there may further immediately there right forced totally underneath rushing free already returning wild like higher greatly freely existing by whole thus quite the following strongly ever into such larger faster water always pulling down or so into further never moving without also always pulling any higher up already many usually dark in very high sometimes one higher completely beyond still returning that also even greater continuing to get lost can only expect sometimes go to or see others again down this area here **sea-puss** and such that sometimes we almost never know that there is no escape but a little longer time in sight after first being repeatedly torn away there for long over to this possibly greater place all far below rising strongly like under its most own created and hidden danger zone.