释义 |
dunnage
dun·nage D0426800 (dŭn′ĭj)n.1. Loose packing material used to protect a ship's cargo from damage during transport.2. Personal baggage. [Middle English dennage, from Middle Dutch denne, flooring of a ship.]dunnage (ˈdʌnɪdʒ) n (Nautical Terms) loose material used for packing cargo[C14: of uncertain origin]dun•nage (ˈdʌn ɪdʒ) n. 1. baggage or personal effects. 2. loose material laid beneath or wedged among objects carried by ship or rail to prevent injury from chafing or moisture or to provide ventilation. [1615–25; earlier dynnage; compare Anglo-Latin dennagium dunnage] Dunnage baggage; clothes collectively—Slang Dictionary, 1874.dunnage
dunnage[′dən·ij] (engineering) A configuration of members that forms a structural support for a cooling tower or similar appendage to a building but is not part of the building itself. (industrial engineering) Padding material placed in a container to protect shipped goods from damage. Loose wood or waste material placed in the ship's hold to protect the cargo from shifting and damage. dunnage1. Pieces of timber which are used to provide structural support for a large item of equipment on a rooftop. 2. Members that form a structural support for a cooling tower or the like, but are not part of the building structure itself.Dunnage
DUNNAGE, mer. law. Pieces of wood placed against the sides and bottom of the hold of a vessel, to preserve the cargo from the effect of leakage, according to its nature and quality. 2 Magens, 101, art. 125, 126 Abbott on Shipp. 227. |