释义 |
Definition of steamship in English: steamshipnounˈstiːmʃɪpˈstimˌʃɪp A ship that is propelled by a steam engine. Example sentencesExamples - In addition Consolidated Lake Superior Corp. operated not only lake vessels, but also ocean going steamships and passenger boats as well, totaling 16 vessels.
- The Suez Canal, opened in 1869, shortened the route east for steamships, although sailing ships still went by the Cape.
- Then, steamships plowed the Atlantic filled with both wealthy patrons inhabiting lavish suites and thousands of European immigrants who, wedged into tight quarters below, really paid the costs of the trip.
- Certainly it is known that in 1901 he was based in Hong Kong and he refloated the steamship München which had run aground on Yap, Caroline Islands.
- Beginning in the 1860s, China became a major importer of European naval technology; and by 1882 the Chinese navy consisted of approximately fifty steamships.
- Large steamships were supplanting smaller sailing vessels as the main carriers of slaves.
- Just up from Kirkhaven harbour, a series of rocks known as The Pillow boasts wreckage thought to belong to the steel steamship Scotland, which ran aground in 1916.
- Telegraph lines were often built alongside the railways, and steamships laid the submarine cables that took the telegraph network across the seas and oceans.
- A large amount of capital was required to transform forges into modern iron and steel industries, equip the shipyards to build steamships, and move from small workshops to modern factories.
- The four deaths in the Forth area included a double fatality when two divers descended 65 metres to a wrecked steamship off Dunbar, East Lothian.
- She was a three-masted steamship that went down while sailing from Boston to Liverpool carrying 400 cattle.
- Under a blue sky we watch the steamship and fast ferry crossing to the mainland and the windsurfers trying their luck.
- Before the advent of steamships, there were merchant sailors who seemed to be a ‘higher’ and somehow more regal member of their class.
- Further along the coast, we dive the only real wreck on this side of Ibiza, a well-broken steamship that was driven sideways into a rocky cove.
- On the way north from Sumburgh Head to Lerwick we had dived the wreck of the Murrayfield, a small steamship that ran onto rocks off Mousa in dense fog in 1942.
- Here, the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum features exhibits on boat building, Chesapeake Bay craft, steamships, and decoy carving.
- Among the ships are a fleet of wooden steamships, built to serve in World War I but then abandoned and brought here to be salvaged.
- The first of three races was held on September 7, amid a spectator fleet of some two hundred steamships and sixty thousand sightseers.
- The next morning they bought an old steamship which was in the port of Baltimore, and renamed it the Exodus.
- As steamships gradually replaced sailing vessels the demand for ropes was reduced and by 1890 the flax mill was closed.
Definition of steamship in US English: steamshipnounˈstimˌʃɪpˈstēmˌSHip A ship that is propelled by a steam engine. Example sentencesExamples - Before the advent of steamships, there were merchant sailors who seemed to be a ‘higher’ and somehow more regal member of their class.
- In addition Consolidated Lake Superior Corp. operated not only lake vessels, but also ocean going steamships and passenger boats as well, totaling 16 vessels.
- The four deaths in the Forth area included a double fatality when two divers descended 65 metres to a wrecked steamship off Dunbar, East Lothian.
- The next morning they bought an old steamship which was in the port of Baltimore, and renamed it the Exodus.
- Further along the coast, we dive the only real wreck on this side of Ibiza, a well-broken steamship that was driven sideways into a rocky cove.
- The first of three races was held on September 7, amid a spectator fleet of some two hundred steamships and sixty thousand sightseers.
- Under a blue sky we watch the steamship and fast ferry crossing to the mainland and the windsurfers trying their luck.
- On the way north from Sumburgh Head to Lerwick we had dived the wreck of the Murrayfield, a small steamship that ran onto rocks off Mousa in dense fog in 1942.
- The Suez Canal, opened in 1869, shortened the route east for steamships, although sailing ships still went by the Cape.
- Certainly it is known that in 1901 he was based in Hong Kong and he refloated the steamship München which had run aground on Yap, Caroline Islands.
- A large amount of capital was required to transform forges into modern iron and steel industries, equip the shipyards to build steamships, and move from small workshops to modern factories.
- Just up from Kirkhaven harbour, a series of rocks known as The Pillow boasts wreckage thought to belong to the steel steamship Scotland, which ran aground in 1916.
- As steamships gradually replaced sailing vessels the demand for ropes was reduced and by 1890 the flax mill was closed.
- Among the ships are a fleet of wooden steamships, built to serve in World War I but then abandoned and brought here to be salvaged.
- Here, the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum features exhibits on boat building, Chesapeake Bay craft, steamships, and decoy carving.
- She was a three-masted steamship that went down while sailing from Boston to Liverpool carrying 400 cattle.
- Telegraph lines were often built alongside the railways, and steamships laid the submarine cables that took the telegraph network across the seas and oceans.
- Beginning in the 1860s, China became a major importer of European naval technology; and by 1882 the Chinese navy consisted of approximately fifty steamships.
- Then, steamships plowed the Atlantic filled with both wealthy patrons inhabiting lavish suites and thousands of European immigrants who, wedged into tight quarters below, really paid the costs of the trip.
- Large steamships were supplanting smaller sailing vessels as the main carriers of slaves.
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