释义 |
[ dok-sahyd ] / ˈdɒkˌsaɪd /
nounland or area adjoining a dock: We were at the dockside to greet them. adjectivepertaining to or located at or near a dockside: dockside warehouses; a dockside fire. Origin of docksideFirst recorded in 1885–90; dock1 + side1 Words nearby docksidedocking station, dockland, dockmackie, dockmaster, dockominium, dockside, dock-walloper, dockworker, dockyard, Doc Martens, doco Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for docksideAcross the street from Dockside and the VFW, another 30-foot sailboat was capsized. Hamptons Residents Reel as Superstorm Sandy Recedes|Emily J. Weitz|October 31, 2012|DAILY BEAST Surely, the newfound cooperation of dockside racketeers had a chilling effect on German espionage. The Real Inglorious Bastards|Eric Dezenhall|July 19, 2011|DAILY BEAST The wharf superintendent hails us from the dockside before the warps are fast. Merchantmen-at-Arms|David W. Bone We left the train at the dockside and boarded the swift Channel steamer moored there. "And they thought we wouldn't fight"|Floyd Gibbons
Indeed, in most dockside resorts it was a common thing for pirates and honest seamen to fraternize with perfect goodwill. The Black Buccaneer|Stephen W. Meader There's not a familiar face on deck, other than maybe one I've seen in a dockside bar, but never one whose name I've known. The Jewels of Aptor|Samuel R. Delany During our brief stay in port it was impossible to procure day-labouring gangs—even the 'gulls' of the dockside were busy at sea. Merchantmen-at-Arms|David W. Bone
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