6 Metaphors for wharf
The long wharf is a bold design; it runs 1743 feet in a right line into the bay, where there is, at the lowest ebb, 17 feet of water.
To him Spruce Wharf was a centre of glorious maritime adventure.
A wharf is a lonely place of a night; especially our wharf, which is full of dark corners, and, being a silly, good-natured fool, I went.
It is alongside this that sailing vessels lie, the wharf being the only land mooring with a roof for the housing of products.
Young Benjamin Franklin tried hard to explain that a wharf on the edge of the millpond was a public necessity.
Men streaked up from the engine-room and across the wharfafter all, the wharf would be the thing he'd try forand I found myself out on the flat with them just as there came another crash, but this time over by the Barbarossa across the bay.