dock
Kelime Anlamı :

1. sanık yeri (mahkemede).
2. dok.
3. rıhtım.
4. limana girmek.
5. azaltmak.
6. yapışık.
7. iskele.
8. tersane.
9. karabuğdaya benzer bir ot.
10. gemi havuzu.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1. to cut off, as the end of a thing; cut short; clip; curtail: as, to dock the tail of a horse.
2. hence to deduct a part from; shorten; curtail; diminish: as, to dock one's wages.
3. nautical, to clue up (a corner of a sail) when it hinders the helmsman from seeing: usually with up.
4. to cut off, rescind, or destroy; bar: as, to dock an entail.
5. to bring or draw into or place in a dock.
6. in biscuit- (cracker-) making, to prick holes in (each biscuit) before it is put in the oven, to provide for the escape of moisture.
7. the common name of those species of rumex which are characterized by little or no acidity and the leaves of which are not hastate. they are coarse herbs, mostly perennials, with thickened rootstocks.
8. A name of various other species of plants, mostly coarse weeds with broad leaves, as dovedock, the coltsfoot, Tussilago Farfara; elf-dock, the elecampane, inula Helenium; prairie-dock, Silphium terebinthinum; round dock, the common mallow, Malva sylvestris; spatter-dock, the yellow pond-lily, nuphar advena; sweet dock, polygonum Bistorta; velvet dock, the mullen, Verbascum Thapsus. see burdock, candock, and hardock.
9. the tail of a beast cut short or clipped; the stump of a tail; the solid part of a tail.
10. the buttocks; the rump.
11. the fleshy part of a boar's chine, between the middle and the rump.
12. A case of leather to cover the clipped or cut tail of a horse.
13. A piece of leather forming part of a crupper.
14. the crupper of a saddle.
15. the stern of a ship.
16. in hydraulic engin., strictly, an inclosed water-space in which a ship floats while being loaded or unloaded, as the space between two wharves or piers; by extension, any space or structure in or upon which a ship may be berthed or held for loading, unloading, repairing, or safe-keeping.
17. the place where a criminal stands in court.
18. rumex persicarioides, an american species long confounded with the golden dock of the old world, found on sandy shores from new Brunswick to virginia and westward to kansas and new mexico, and also on the pacific coast.
19. docks are distinguished broadly as wet docks, or those consisting of an inclosed water-space or basin in which ships lie to take in or discharge cargo, and which cannot be pumped dry; and dry-docks, in which vessels can be taken entirely clear of water. the latter are divided into excavated or graving-docks, slip-docks, lifting-docks, and floating docks. A basin dock is a wet dock whose entrance is continually open to the tide; a closed dock, one whose entrance is closed by a lock, caisson, or gate so as to maintain the interior water-level approximately constant. A slip-dock is one in which a vessel is partially hauled out on a marine railway in a slip provided with gates which are closed at low tide, excluding the water from the vessel. A lifting-dock is one in which a submerged platform on which the ship is landed on blocks and is then raised vertically clear of the water with the ship by hydraulic power. an off-shore dock is a floating dock with a bottom aud one side wall, maintained in an upright position by means of upper and lower parallel booms attached to the side wall and to strong vertical columns built on the foreshore. A box-dock is a floating dock whose ends can be closed by caissons or gates after the entrance of the vessel, the interior space being then pumped out as in a graving-dock. A balance-dock is the ordinary type of floating dock with open ends, in which the side walls arc utilized as ballast compartments to maintain the dock in level balance. A self-docking floating dock is one so arranged in detachable sections that all its underwater parts can be successively docked by the remaining parts for examination and repairs.
20. in railroading, a track at a siding or in a freight yard, having a raised platform on each side for convenience in loading at the level of the car door.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia