|
DOCK |
Wharf |
|
PIER |
Wharf |
|
QUAY |
Wharf |
|
BERTH |
Wharf area |
|
|
QUAYSIDE |
Wharf area |
|
STEVEDORE |
Wharf labourer |
|
STEVEDORES |
Wharf labourers |
|
WHARFS |
Of Wharf |
|
|
WHARFED |
Of Wharf |
|
WHARVES |
Of Wharf |
|
WHARFING |
Of Wharf |
|
STADE |
A landing place or wharf. |
|
WHARFAGE |
A wharf or wharfs, collectively; wharfing. |
|
JETTY |
A wharf or pier extending from the shore. |
|
DOLPHIN |
A mooring post on a wharf or beach. |
|
DOCKED |
Do shift on deck while tied up at wharf |
|
GHAUT |
Stairs descending to a river; a landing place; a wharf. |
|
STAGE |
A platform, often floating, serving as a kind of wharf. |
|
WHARF |
To place upon a wharf; to bring to a wharf. |
|
WHARFINGER |
A man who owns, or has the care of, a wharf. |
|
WAREHOUSEMAN |
One who keeps a warehouse; the owner or keeper of a
dock warehouse or wharf store. |
|
BREASTFAST |
A large rope to fasten the midship part of a ship to a
wharf, or to another vessel. |
|
STAITH |
A landing place; an elevated staging upon a wharf for
discharging coal, etc., as from railway cars, into vessels. |
|
FENDER |
Anything serving as a cushion to lessen the shock
when a vessel comes in contact with another vessel or a wharf. |
|
REBUILD |
To build again, as something which has been demolished;
to construct anew; as, to rebuild a house, a wall, a wharf, or a city. |