They drove her to a parking lot near to the marina, and she mutely followed them down to the dock. |
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As it happened, Workington's adherence to acid steelmaking sealed the fate of the ore dock in the next few years. |
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The tide slapped against the dock wall, and seagulls croaked as they bobbed on the waves, or flew above their heads. |
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A wooden vessel maneuvered to dock at a pier on Mahakam Ulu River, the sound of its whistle wailing far and wide. |
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A commodious dock box can be one of the most effective ways to reduce wasted fuel by giving you a place to store unneeded gear. |
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Soldiers seemed to be dropping the second as she waved the staff, moving gracefully around the dock. |
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The villagers all line the dock, tears welling in their respective eyes, waving a mournful farewell to the departing sailors. |
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Storm-swiped vessels with broken masts and tattered sails beached alongside the dock, frail and weather-beaten, but home from the squall. |
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Judge Robert Moore asked Walker to sit down in the dock as he outlined his reasons for jailing him for five years. |
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And this capsule will be able to dock itself, without needing the ISS to grab ahold and guide it in. |
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By 1636, the accommodation ladder was lowered on the dock, and shortly thereafter officials, media, and hungry longshoremen started coming aboard. |
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Lupher says the carnival Magic tried to land in Cozumel, but that the Mexican authorities blocked them from the dock. |
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The robot uses this wire to locate the boundary of the area to be trimmed and in some cases to locate a recharging dock. |
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During the 1960s, at the time when the upstream docks were closing, the PLA further extended the Tilbury dock facilities. |
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Once a section of rope is designated for a particular purpose on a vessel, it generally is called a line, as in outhaul line or dock line. |
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By the early 2000s, the condition of Gipsy Moth IV, even though it continued to rest in a Greenwich dry dock hoist, had seriously deteriorated. |
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The town grew rapidly from the 1830s onwards, when the Marquess of Bute built a dock, which eventually linked to the Taff Vale Railway. |
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Originally a more significant river than it is today, the Farset formed a dock on High Street until the mid 19th century. |
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Since two or three of the group would usually be in dock repairing weather or battle damage, the groups typically sailed with about six ships. |
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The only operational dock left in Glasgow operated by Clydeport is the King George V Dock, near Braehead. |
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In 1892 the Alexandra South Dock was opened and was the largest masonry dock in the world. |
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A port is a location on a coast or shore containing one or more harbors where ships can dock and transfer people or cargo to or from land. |
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Over the years, five different submarine tenders and one floating dry dock served in the loch. |
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The main entrance to the castle was the Gate next the Sea, next to the castle's tidal dock that allowed it to be supplied directly by sea. |
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The jetty is now used by Orthios to dock cruise ships visiting from all over the world. |
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A milk dock was built 1881, and by the 20th century over 3,000 churns were being handled at the station every day. |
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Ferry boats often dock at specialized facilities designed to position the boat for loading and unloading, called a ferry slip. |
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Porthcawl town, once possessing a small dock, abandoned the trade in favour of tourism. |
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The dock design was by Admiral William Henry Smyth and the resident engineer was George Turnbull. |
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Two years after the October 1839 dock opening, the Taff Vale Railway was opened, following much the same route as the canal. |
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By 1913, this had risen to 10,700,000 tons, making Cardiff second only to Barry, Wales as the largest coal exporting dock in the world. |
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The interconnected dock system was the most advanced port system in the world. |
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The docks enabled ship movements within the dock system 24 hours a day, isolated from the high River Mersey tides. |
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From 1885 the dock system was the hub of a hydraulic power network that stretched beyond the docks. |
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NeverDed's wireless charging conversion kit includes a mobile phone wireless adapter, home dock, car dock, and portable charger. |
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He also invested in dockyards, and commissioned the oldest surviving dry dock in 1495 at Portsmouth. |
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He was pushing a barrow on the fish dock, wheeling aluminium kits which, when full, each contain 10 stone of fish. |
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Also at the back of the court, often adjacent to the dock, is an area from where members of the public can observe the proceedings. |
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Industrial activities ceased in the dock with the closure of the power stations. |
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The Port of Bristol Authority finally closed the dock in 1992, and it has now been developed into a marina and residential area. |
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Significant rebuilding followed the war, including massive housing estates and the Seaforth Dock, the largest dock project in Britain. |
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The advent of containerisation meant that the city's docks became largely obsolete, and dock workers were thrown out of jobs. |
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The craft will dock together to enable the crew to transfer to the ferry vehicles for descent to the surface at a selected site. |
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The crew will return to Martian orbit with the ferry vehicle and rendezvous and dock with the orbiting Manned spacecraft. |
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It has the ability to dock with orbiting spacecraft and move payload in orbit. |
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Construction was carried out in a specially adapted dry dock in Bristol, England. |
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An alternative escape means is via a Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle that can dock onto the disabled submarine. |
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The first wet dock in Britain was opened in Liverpool in 1715, and the town's population grew from some 6,000 to 80,000 during the 18th century. |
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In 1922 a new oil dock was built at Stanlow near Ellesmere Port, and in 1934 oil refining began there. |
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By sea, Sicily is served by several ferry routes and cargo ports, and in all major cities, cruise ships dock on a regular basis. |
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Close to 6,000 ships dock at the Port of Oslo annually with a total of 6 million tonnes of cargo and over five million passengers. |
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Princess Royal stayed initially at Rosyth but transferred to dry dock at Portsmouth before returning to duty at Rosyth 21 July. |
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Captain Semmes soon requested permission to dry dock and overhaul his ship, much needed after so long a time at sea and so many naval actions. |
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The same day, the Luftwaffe heavily bombed Dunkirk, both the town and the dock installations. |
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Gneisenau was lightly damaged and dock gates were smashed, stranding Scharnhorst for a month, for a loss six bombers. |
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On 25 January 1942, the ships were photographed in the harbour and two short periods in dry dock by two ships were seen. |
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The canal links the city to the sea to permit cargo ships and ferries to dock in the port of Caen. |
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Crews noticed that as ships approached the dock, passengers moved to the side of the ship ready to disembark. |
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We returned to the crossing, passing slowly through the high rusty stands of dock weeds and the fleshy beds of dense paspalum. |
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The pier had been extended again in 1812 and John Matthews opened a small dry dock in 1814, the first in the South West. |
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The goal of the salvage may be to repair the vessel at a harbour or dry dock, or to clear a channel for navigation. |
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She was once more caulked and repaired in 1527 in a newly dug dock at Portsmouth and her longboat was repaired and trimmed. |
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The construction has been challenging because the museum has been built over the ship in the dry dock which is a listed monument. |
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While mainly used by citizens and dock workers, they can also be used for sightseeing tours. |
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The very mother's head you swore by in the dock is a heavier head, crowned with ponderable hair. |
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An important element will be a landing platform dock ship, whose planned acquisition has been however delayed. |
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The plan includes leaving the dock and harbor area, the en route portion of a voyage, approaching the destination, and mooring. |
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The graving docks were constructed adjacent to the south bank of the canal, and a floating pontoon dock was built nearby. |
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The IRA also employed passive sabotage, refusing dock and train workers to work on ships and rail cars used by the government. |
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The monopoly was generated by formal meetings of the local management of coal companies agreeing to fix a minimum price for sale at dock. |
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In 1866 the Hodbarrow Mining Company built a lighthouse on Hodbarrow Point to guide ships to its dock. |
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The Fleetwood Docks Act of 1864 enabled the construction of a dock and embankment for both fishing and general cargo. |
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The derelict dock landing area was developed into Freeport, a retail centre, and housing has been built at the north end of the marina. |
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You six will report to the chief cook to begin your two-week spud bashing duty until we dock at Singapore. |
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Plants to consider in the treatment of iron deficiency include agrimony, centaury, barberry, ginger, nettle and yellow dock. |
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Plus it looks fantastic, with multiple colorful dock faces to choose from, and a sleek, subtly patterned watchband available in white or black. |
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The shipment of tools arrived at the dock in cargo containers yesterday. |
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Add to them the perennial weeds such as dandelion, dock, clover, creeping woodsorrel and six dozen more. |
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Back on shore the parties start right at the dock in among the marina berths with the Yachties Hour hosted by Peppers Blue on Blue. |
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Resources and materials were stored at the dock before being shipped to the wind farm site on Morecambe Bay. |
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The maximum dimensions of vessels that can dock in Barrow are 200 m length by 35 m beam and 10 m draught. |
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There is a very early complete graving dock in what was Hancock's Yard. |
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Birkenhead's dock system is part of the Port of Liverpool, operated by the Mersey Docks and Harbour Company under the ownership of The Peel Group. |
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The keel of the first LST was laid down on 10 June 1942 at Newport News, Virginia, and the first standardized LSTs were floated out of their building dock in October. |
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The ship, USNS Comet, had a stern ramp as well as interior ramps, which allowed cars to drive directly from the dock, onto the ship, and into place. |
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In 748, the Buddhist monk Jian Zhen described Guangzhou as a bustling mercantile center where many large and impressive foreign ships came to dock. |
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While Salsette was anchored awaiting Ottoman permission to dock at the city, on 3 May 1810 Byron and Lieutenant Ekenhead, of Salsette's Marines, swam the Hellespont. |
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In 1843 a new dock, the Francis Dock, was opened at Runcorn. |
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The largest dock on the dock network, Seaforth Dock, was opened in 1972 and deals with grain and containers, accommodating what were the largest containers ships at that time. |
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Ships are normally at sea, and dock scenes surprisingly absent. |
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Able UK operate the biggest dry dock in the UK near Seaton Carew, Hartlepool where ships can be dismantled and oil rigs can be dismantled or refurbished. |
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This is an agreement with the intention to stop port states from allowing boats to dock that participated in illegal, unreported or unregulated fishing. |
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The Lyver Pool, a tidal inlet in the narrows of the estuary, which is now largely under the Liverpool One shopping centre, was converted into the enclosed dock. |
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Warspite was dry docked at Rosyth, returning to the fleet on 22 July, while Malaya was repaired in the floating dock at Invergordon, returning to duty on 11 July. |
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The only dock to remain a viable exporter was the Port of Port Talbot. |
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The dry dock also remains, along with two out of ten building slips. |
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Some cruise ships are already scheduled to dock in Barrow, mainly for tourists to visit the Lake District, although there is no official cruise ship terminal yet. |
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Gneisenau was hit by a bomb which failed to explode and was moved from dry dock to the outer harbour, where it was photographed by a 1 PRU Spitfire on 5 April. |
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This was one of the few sites in the haven suitable for building a dock for constructing decent sized ships, as its shoreline was flat but led quickly into deep harbour. |
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The dock was protected by a wall later named the Gunners Walk and a firing platform that may have housed a trebuchet siege engine during the medieval period. |
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On 8 February, in a break in the weather, PR found that the ships were still in harbour, Scharnhorst was in dock and that another two destroyers had arrived. |
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On 28 March the British raided St Nazaire in Operation Chariot and destroyed the Normandie dock, the only one in France that could accommodate the largest German warships. |
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To lay the foundation for an all-weather dock at Shelter Bay, he filled an old barge with worn-out grindstones from the Thorold paper mill, then scuttled the vessel. |
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Commercial activities on the land of the dock estate include fuel storage, natural gas storage, several engineering facilities and a shell fish specialist. |
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The workers were shoring up the dock after part of it fell into the water. |
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The jetty was extended in 1870, allowing sufficient depth for shallow draft vessels to dock at any tide, and soon daily steamers from Melbourne were calling. |
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He said that lessons from the pilots would be carried forward into the plan to dock the benefits of drug misusers who failed to attend for job interviews. |
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It was rather as though, after being in makeshift wet dock for days, the Queen Mary had just sailed out of, say, Walden Pond, as suddenly and perversely as she had sailed in. |
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This is a coastal hamlet by a very small dock, salterns and estuary. |
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According to one version, he'd been so drunk at a yachtboard party one night that he'd fallen overboard and drowned in Sydney Harbour within sight of the Cremorne ferry dock. |
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Porthmadog are appealing against the FAW's decision to fine them pounds 13,200 and dock them three points after a fan behaved abusively last December. |
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And as I sat there brooding on the old, unknown world, I thought of Gatsby's wonder when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy's dock. |
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And to complete the badge I thought of the town of Ipswich which contains many historical buildings, including the Wolsey Gate, and is close to the sea with a large dock area. |
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Rations were suspended if the ship was at dock and the men ashore. |
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