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 ship [ʃip]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 船, 舰

vt. 以船运送, 装船, 运送

vi. 上船, 乘船

[经] 船舶; 用船运, 装货




    ship
    shipped, shipping


    Ship \Ship\, n. [AS. scipe.]
    Pay; reward. [Obs.]

    In withholding or abridging of the ship or the hire or
    the wages of servants. --Chaucer.


    Ship \Ship\, n. [OE. ship, schip, AS. scip; akin to OFries.
    skip, OS. scip, D. schip, G. schiff, OHG. scif, Dan. skib,
    Sw. skeep, Icel. & Goth. skip; of unknown origin. Cf.
    {Equip}, {Skiff}, {Skipper}.]
    1. Any large seagoing vessel.

    Like a stately ship . . .
    With all her bravery on, and tackle trim,
    Sails filled, and streamers waving. --Milton.

    Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State! --Longfellow.

    2. Specifically, a vessel furnished with a bowsprit and three
    masts (a mainmast, a foremast, and a mizzenmast), each of
    which is composed of a lower mast, a topmast, and a
    topgallant mast, and square-rigged on all masts. See
    Illustation in Appendix.
    l Port or Larboard Side; s Starboard Side;
    1 Roundhouse or Deck House; 2 Tiller; 3 Grating; 4 Wheel;
    5 Wheel Chains; 6 Binnacle; 7 Mizzenmast; 8 Skylight; 9
    Capstan; 10 Mainmast; 11 Pumps; 12 Galley or Caboose; 13
    Main Hatchway; 14 Windlass; 15 Foremast; 16 Fore Hatchway;
    17 Bitts; 18 Bowsprit; 19 Head Rail; 20 Boomkins; 21
    Catheads on Port Bow and Starboard Bow; 22 Fore Chains; 23
    Main Chains; 24 Mizzen Chains; 25 Stern.
    1 Fore Royal Stay; 2 Flying Jib Stay; 3
    Fore Topgallant Stay;4 Jib Stay; 5 Fore Topmast Stays; 6
    Fore Tacks; 8 Flying Martingale; 9 Martingale Stay,
    shackled to Dolphin Striker; 10 Jib Guys; 11 Jumper Guys;
    12 Back Ropes; 13 Robstays; 14 Flying Jib Boom; 15 Flying
    Jib Footropes; 16 Jib Boom; 17 Jib Foottropes; 18
    Bowsprit; 19 Fore Truck; 20 Fore Royal Mast; 21 Fore Royal
    Lift; 22 Fore Royal Yard; 23 Fore Royal Backstays; 24 Fore
    Royal Braces; 25 Fore Topgallant Mast and Rigging; 26 Fore
    Topgallant Lift; 27 Fore Topgallant Yard; 28 Fore
    Topgallant Backstays; 29 Fore Topgallant Braces; 30 Fore
    Topmast and Rigging; 31 Fore Topsail Lift; 32 Fore Topsail
    Yard; 33 Fore Topsail Footropes; 34 Fore Topsail Braces;
    35 Fore Yard; 36 Fore Brace; 37 Fore Lift; 38 Fore Gaff;
    39 Fore Trysail Vangs; 40 Fore Topmast Studding-sail Boom;
    41 Foremast and Rigging; 42 Fore Topmast Backstays; 43
    Fore Sheets; 44 Main Truck and Pennant; 45 Main Royal Mast
    and Backstay; 46 Main Royal Stay; 47 Main Royal Lift; 48
    Main Royal Yard; 49 Main Royal Braces; 50 Main Topgallant
    Mast and Rigging; 51 Main Topgallant Lift; 52 Main
    Topgallant Backstays; 53 Main Topgallant Yard; 54 Main
    Topgallant Stay; 55 Main Topgallant Braces; 56 Main
    Topmast and Rigging; 57 Topsail Lift; 58 Topsail Yard; 59
    Topsail Footropes; 60 Topsail Braces; 61 Topmast Stays; 62
    Main Topgallant Studding-sail Boom; 63 Main Topmast
    Backstay; 64 Main Yard; 65 Main Footropes; 66 Mainmast and
    Rigging; 67 Main Lift; 68 Main Braces; 69 Main Tacks; 70
    Main Sheets; 71 Main Trysail Gaff; 72 Main Trysail Vangs;
    73 Main Stays; 74 Mizzen Truck; 75 Mizzen Royal Mast and
    Rigging; 76 Mizzen Royal Stay; 77 Mizzen Royal Lift; 78
    Mizzen Royal Yard; 79 Mizzen Royal Braces; 80 Mizzen
    Topgallant Mast and Rigging; 81 Mizzen Topgallant Lift; 82
    Mizzen Topgallant Backstays; 83 Mizzen Topgallant Braces;
    84 Mizzen Topgallant Yard; 85 Mizzen Topgallant Stay; 86
    Mizzen Topmast and Rigging; 87 Mizzen Topmast Stay; 88
    Mizzen Topsail Lift; 89 Mizzen Topmast Backstays; 90
    Mizzen Topsail Braces; 91 Mizzen Topsail Yard; 92 Mizzen
    Topsail Footropes; 93 Crossjack Yard; 94 Crossjack
    Footropes; 95 Crossjack Lift; 96 Crossjack Braces; 97
    Mizzenmast and Rigging; 98 Mizzen Stay; 99 Spanker Gaff;
    100 Peak Halyards; 101 Spanker Vangs; 102 Spanker Boom;
    103 Spanker Boom Topping Lift; 104 Jacob's Ladder, or
    Stern Ladder; 105 Spanker Sheet; 106 Cutwater; 107
    Starboard Bow; 108 Starboard Beam; 109 Water Line; 110
    Starboard Quarter; 111 Rudder.

    3. A dish or utensil (originally fashioned like the hull of a
    ship) used to hold incense. [Obs.] --Tyndale.

    {Armed ship}, a private ship taken into the service of the
    government in time of war, and armed and equipped like a
    ship of war. [Eng.] --Brande & C.

    {General ship}. See under {General}.

    {Ship biscuit}, hard biscuit prepared for use on shipboard;
    -- called also {ship bread}. See {Hardtack}.

    {Ship boy}, a boy who serves in a ship. ``Seal up the ship
    boy's eyes.'' --Shak.

    {Ship breaker}, one who breaks up vessels when unfit for
    further use.

    {Ship broker}, a mercantile agent employed in buying and
    selling ships, procuring cargoes, etc., and generally in
    transacting the business of a ship or ships when in port.


    {Ship canal}, a canal suitable for the passage of seagoing
    vessels.

    {Ship carpenter}, a carpenter who works at shipbuilding; a
    shipwright.

    {Ship chandler}, one who deals in cordage, canvas, and other,
    furniture of vessels.

    {Ship chandlery}, the commodities in which a ship chandler
    deals; also, the business of a ship chandler.

    {Ship fever} (Med.), a form of typhus fever; -- called also
    {putrid fever}, {jail fever}, or {hospital fever}.

    {Ship joiner}, a joiner who works upon ships.

    {Ship letter}, a letter conveyed by a ship not a mail packet.


    {Ship money} (Eng. Hist.), an imposition formerly charged on
    the ports, towns, cities, boroughs, and counties, of
    England, for providing and furnishing certain ships for
    the king's service. The attempt made by Charles I. to
    revive and enforce this tax was resisted by John Hampden,
    and was one of the causes which led to the death of
    Charles. It was finally abolished.

    {Ship of the line}. See under {Line}.

    {Ship pendulum}, a pendulum hung amidships to show the extent
    of the rolling and pitching of a vessel.

    {Ship railway}.
    (a) An inclined railway with a cradelike car, by means of
    which a ship may be drawn out of water, as for
    repairs.
    (b) A railway arranged for the transportation of vessels
    overland between two water courses or harbors.

    {Ship's company}, the crew of a ship or other vessel.

    {Ship's days}, the days allowed a vessel for loading or
    unloading.

    {Ship's husband}. See under {Husband}.

    {Ship's papers} (Mar. Law), papers with which a vessel is
    required by law to be provided, and the production of
    which may be required on certain occasions. Among these
    papers are the register, passport or sea letter, charter
    party, bills of lading, invoice, log book, muster roll,
    bill of health, etc. --Bouvier. --Kent.

    {To make ship}, to embark in a ship or other vessel.


    Ship \Ship\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Shipped}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Shipping}.]
    1. To put on board of a ship, or vessel of any kind, for
    transportation; to send by water.

    The timber was . . . shipped in the bay of Attalia,
    from whence it was by sea transported to Pelusium.
    --Knolles.

    2. By extension, in commercial usage, to commit to any
    conveyance for transportation to a distance; as, to ship
    freight by railroad.

    3. Hence, to send away; to get rid of. [Colloq.]

    4. To engage or secure for service on board of a ship; as, to
    ship seamen.

    5. To receive on board ship; as, to ship a sea.

    6. To put in its place; as, to ship the tiller or rudder.


    Ship \Ship\, v. i.
    1. To engage to serve on board of a vessel; as, to ship on a
    man-of-war.

    2. To embark on a ship. --Wyclif (Acts xxviii. 11)

    1. Hailed as the "Mozart of shipping" for his precociousness, Martinos entered the business as a teen-ager when his mother and her brothers _ a shipping lawyer and a sea captain _ bought their first ship.
    2. As business slows at Wesray, some of its younger investment bankers, who haven't made Simon-size fortunes yet, are jumping ship.
    3. According to Antarctic sea charts, plenty of them are on the jagged bottom at Sail Rock near Deception Island, ready to rip through the strongest of hulls like the reinforced one of the Polar Duke, a modern U.S. research ship.
    4. The French battleship Jean D'Arc will sail to the United States and Puerto Rico in 1989, calling in at the ports of Pearl Harbor, San Francisco, New Orleans and Puerto Rico where the ship will be open to the public.
    5. The rally followed a surge of buying on Wednesday and may reflect the market's uneasiness about the government's plan to ship $10 million worth of U.S. pork bellies to Poland as part of a food-aid package.
    6. "A commander doesn't abandon his ship in stormy weather." _ Noriega responding to questions about whether he would step down in the face of pressure from the United States, May 1988.
    7. "It was just like tinfoil," said Chris Nicholson, who developed and piloted the small video robot attached by cable to the mother ship.
    8. The U.S. frigate Jack Williams, a sister ship to the Roberts, went to the tanker's aid from about nine miles away.
    9. He was contacted by telephone in Male by The Associated Press and said the captain's statement "may have been propaganda." The BBC report identified the ship as the Progress Light.
    10. If necessary, he said, the cargo will be moved to another ship from the Green Bay, which has made several successful trips for Honda since it was completed Oct. 29 by Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Ltd.
    11. The $50 gadget, Game Genie, was kept off the market until this fall by legal challenges from Nintendo. Galoob expects to ship one million units into stores by Christmas.
    12. Administration officials estimate that China, Iran's largest arms supplier, contracted to ship about $1 billion of weapons to Tehran this year.
    13. Every six seconds a half-dozen air guns fire into the water, sending a deep "thud" penetrating up to 20 kilometers into the ocean floor and bouncing back to the ship's electronic ears.
    14. National Steel & Shipbuilding Co., a unit of Morrison-Knudsen Corp., won a $290.1 million Navy contract to build a combat-support ship.
    15. Patrol boats shadowed a Soviet spy ship as it passed through the Korea Straits, South Korea's navy said Saturday.
    16. At precisely 20.00 hours a bugle sounded and Lt Cmdr Johns and I joined the ship's company on deck.
    17. Foam spraying has been delayed since Monday because the ship was too hot and crews feared another explosion even if the flames were doused.
    18. The new drill, which can be lowered from any ship, will be "smarter" than current drills which cannot be adjusted from the surface once they are running.
    19. He said Rheineisen was able "at the last moment" Wednesday to keep the first delivery of the chemicals from being loaded aboard a ship in India.
    20. Miss Bande said that as giant waves battered the 2,855-ton Dona Marilyn on Monday, she and hundreds of others anxiously waited on deck as the crew frantically tried to pump water from the ship.
    21. The ship's Phalanx gun, designed to hurl a storm of radar-guided shells at an incoming cruise missile, was on automatic, and its own missiles and Stinger anti-aircraft teams were ready to fire.
    22. Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney announced late Friday his country will contribute two destroyers and a supply ship to the multinational force.
    23. A U.S. Navy captain said today he would have rescued Vietnamese boat people his ship found in the South China Sea if he had been correctly informed of their desperate plight.
    24. Very little of the Iran-bound weaponry actually goes through Britain, however, because most of the deals are handled through telexes with offshore dealers, who then ship directly or indirectly to the Mideast.
    25. While the good ship will, at best, be in dry dock for some time, all hands were safe.
    26. The rest, about 29,000 gallons, are various lubrication oils used to run the ship, Asaro said.
    27. But Smith noted that Hazelwood apparently felt the ship was in competent hands.
    28. Robert D. Ballard, the expedition's leader, said the ship's state of preservation was remarkable.
    29. He testified that the ship didn't respond to his rudder changes, but an on-board recorder indicated his turns were simply too late.
    30. Fred P. Moosally, the commander of the ship, has said there were no indications of any problems with the guns before the explosion.
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