33 Words to use with harbouring

In Dar-es-Salaam you will see the König stranded at the harbour mouth, the Tabora lying on her side behind the ineffectual shelter of the land; the side uppermost innocent of the Red Cross and green line that adorned her seaward side.

Captain Nugent and his friend turned to the harbour-master to see how he would meet this poser.

GULLS When the mist drives past and the wind blows high, And the harbour lights are dim See where they circle, and dip and fly, The grey free-lances of wind and sky, To the water's distant rim!

And there's little to earn, and many to keep, Though the harbour bar be moaning.

They are long service men, cast for sea owing to various medical reasons, but perfectly efficient for harbour work.

I stared across the river till I had mastered my countenance, and when I looked again at the two they were soberly discussing the harbour dues of Boston.

Army authorities know how far they may take cars with reasonable safety as well as a pilot knows the rocks and shoals at a harbour entrance.

This, perhaps, together with the poor harbour accommodation in Florida, accounts for the small size of the vessels which generally trade there.

By all the rules of art there should be a lighthouse or a harbour pier in the background to show that everything will end happily.

ADJOINING JUTE SEEDS IN DUNDEE HARBOUR 7. HARBOUR PORTERS REMOVING BALES OF JUTE FROM VESSEL SHOWN IN FIG.

At all events, the harbour constructions, partly building, partly projected, at Rosyth and Scapa Flow, were chosen with an eye to this line of blockade.

The day after arrival he rowed with six men to a small native village outside the harbour heads, at a spot still called Murdering Beach.

Only the ignorant minds to-day harbour ideas of cruelty and revenge in connection with a Creator.

The attractions of harbour life did not keep us away from the old manor-house.

The tarry, fishy and beery (in a manufacturing sense only) old town is on the south side of the harbour bridge and has little in common with the busy and popular watering place on the north and east.

He was rather sore at having to exchange a responsible harbour billet for the command of a mere sea-going trawler, and expressed the opinion that there might be more disgustingly dirty ships afloat than ours, but if so they were not allowed out during official daylight; We felt her quiver from stem to stern with rage.

and the harbour bell rang out on the night air.

I hadn't one of my own men among them, but, to make sure, I sent Petty Officer Trehayne on board at eight o'clock to keep a sharp look-out and to see all the harbour party off the vessel.

In the different harbour basins, lay the warships, which looked bigger, and more awe-inspiring close to, like this, than lately, when the boy had seen them from up above.

Just then a man in white darted out of the office of the harbour-police station, and, holding up his hand, cried to Harris: "One minuteone minute!"

Their priests (magicians as the Bible calls them) never wore any garments but linen, for fear of their harbouring vermin of any kind.

Ere we shall round the harbour reef And anchor off the wharves of home!

Then, sitting upon our canopied upper deck, enjoying the last of our city melons cooled with the last of our city ice, we looked out over what we supposed was but the first of many such beautiful creek-harbour scenes to be found along the river.

Next to her came Arles, which supplied ship-builders and seamen to the fleet of Provence; and Narbonne, which admitted into its harbour ships from Spain, Sicily, and Africa, until, in consequence of the Aude having changed its course, it was obliged to relinquish the greater part of its maritime commerce in favour of Montpellier.

" CHAPTER V There was a babel of voices as the long train came to a stand-still in the harbour station at Ostend.

33 Words to use with  harbouring