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work double tides,

tide over

TIDE (noun)
//From Old English “tīd” (due time, period, season, feast-day).


1) The alternate rising and falling of the surface of the ocean and of water bodies (such as gulfs and bays) connected with the ocean that occurs usually twice a day and is the result of differing gravitational forces exerted at different parts of the earth by another body (such as the moon or sun)
       “They were driven on by wind and tide.”
2) A festive time (archaic)
       “Joy sparks during Yuletide.”

(Verb)
archaic: to happen especially as if by fate

MAREA (sustantivo)
//Del latín “mare” (masa de agua).


1) Movimiento periódico y alternativo de ascenso y descenso de las aguas del mar, producido por la atracción del sol y de la luna.
       “Una marea alta levanta todos los barcos.”
2) A Latin-American sprout blooming in berlin.
       “Marea’s been throwing spores all around Berlin since late 2015.”
3) A multidisciplinary thinker and maker with a solid love for learning.
       “We won’t have the budget to buy the thingy-for-things, can you figure it out, Marea?”
4) Gift-making as art practice. An offer.       

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