单词 | shipboard |
释义 | shipboardn. a. The side of a ship (see board n. 12); chiefly in phr.: within shipboard = on board ship; over (the) shipboard = overboard v.; to or from shipboard = on to or off a ship. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > side(s) of vessel > [noun] boardOE sideOE shipboardc1200 broadside1591 beama1665 c1200 Vices & Virtues 43 Alle ðe wið-innen scipes borde wunigeð. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 761 Ne cume ȝe neauer wið-vten scipes bord [c1300 Otho sipes bord]. c1300 (?c1225) King Horn (Cambr.) (1901) l. 113 Þe children hi broȝte to stronde..In to schupes borde. ?a1400 Morte Arth. 1699 With-in chippe-burdez. c1430 Syr Gener. 364 He..bad here lodesman at a word Should cast hem ouer the ship bord. c1440 Bone Flor. 1796 I schall hyt hynge on a knagg, At the schypp borde ende. 1470–85 T. Malory Morte d'Arthur iv. vi. 125 An C torches sette vpon alle the sydes of the shyp bordes. 1494 Act 11 Hen. VII c. 4 Any Person selling or buying by Water-measure within the Ship-board. 1498 in J. Bulloch Pynours (1887) 56 Borne..fra the Schipburd at the Key to ony part of this burghe. 1586 Reg. Privy Council Scott. 1st Ser. IV. 123 Thay have ressavit within schip~burde a grite quantite of victuallis. 1594 (a1555) D. Lindsay Hist. Squyer Meldrum l. 174, in Wks. (1931) I. 150 And euerie man to shipburd drew. 1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) xii. lxxii. 299 In saying which came Stafford in, and wils them to dispatch To Ship-boord. a1616 W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors (1623) v. i. 411 Shall I fetch your stuffe from shipbord ? View more context for this quotation 1652 T. Froysell Gale of Opportunity 31 The Marriners they cast him over Ship-board. 1848 W. M. Thackeray Vanity Fair lvii. 519 His new patient, who had been consigned to ship-board by the Madras practitioner with very small hopes indeed. b. on shipboard: on board ship. (See board n. 14) Also †a shipboard (frequent c1620–1720). ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > [phrase] > on board ship within board?a1400 a shipboard1488 on board1688 of shipboard1840 1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) xi. l. 870 A cruell cowntyr thar was on schipburd seyn. 1556 R. Robinson tr. T. More Utopia (ed. 2) sig. Svv By reason of cold taken, I thinke, a shippeborde. 1569 R. Grafton Chron. II. 686 Commaunding his men to go on ship borde. 1589 Voy. Sir F. Drake in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations iii. sig. Mmm7 We..brought them a shipboord. 1661 S. Pepys Diary 14 Feb. (1970) II. 36 The first time I ever carried my wife a-shipboard. 1758 J. Blake Plan Marine Syst. 18 A Liberty Ticket,..allowing him to follow his occupation unmolested, either on shore or on ship-board. 1848 C. Dickens Dombey & Son lx. 602 Being then on shipboard, bound for Bengal. 1888 R. Garnett Life Emerson ii. 43 They were fellow passengers on ship-board back to Charleston. c. Similarly of shipboard. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > [phrase] > on board ship within board?a1400 a shipboard1488 on board1688 of shipboard1840 1840 C. J. Lever Charles O'Malley xxxvi, in Dublin Univ. Mag. Oct. 452/2 The escape from the durance vile of ship-board. 1853 E. K. Kane U.S. Grinnell Exped. (1856) xxii. 173 The life of shipboard. d. by shipboard: by ship. rare. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > [phrase] > by ship by shipboard1842 1842 Peter Parley's Ann. 250 My grandfather had a dog which he brought by ship-board to London. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > [noun] > planking > a plank shipboard1337 1337–9 in B. Sandahl Middle Eng. Sea Terms (1951) I. 89 Bordis magnis et spissis vocatis Shippebord’ emptis pro confectione nauis predicte. 1483 Cath. Angl. 337/1 A Schyppe burde, asser. 1486 in M. Oppenheim Naval Accts. & Inventories Henry VII (1896) 15 vij Shipbordes..spent..in repayring..of the Cokke of the same Ship. 1560 Bible (Geneva) Ezek. xxvii. 5 Thei haue made all thy ship bordes of fyrre trees of Shenir. 3. attributive. Esp. in phrases shipboard acquaintance, shipboard romance, etc., to denote casual or ephemeral relationships. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > [adjective] > occurring on board board-ship1852 shipboard acquaintance1857 1857 Ld. Dufferin Lett. from High Latitudes (ed. 3) 147 The innocuous cates which generally compose ship-board rations. 1880 L. S. Floyer Plain Hints Examiners Needlework 123 To make mops for shipboard cleaning. 1890 W. C. Russell Marriage at Sea x What will she have to say to a shipboard wedding? 1916 G. B. Shaw Overruled 78 Was it the usual aimless man's lark: a mere shipboard flirtation? 1933 F. Baldwin Innocent Bystander vi. 107 A shipboard romance will do a lot for his ego. 1963 ‘W. Haggard’ High Wire iv. 37 I'm a casual pick-up in the snow, a sort of shipboard acquaintance. 1978 ‘M. M. Kaye’ Far Pavilions ix. 148 It had been possible for Mrs Harlowe to introduce both young men as shipboard acquaintances. 1980 J. Gardner Garden of Weapons ii. viii. 194 He should be able to treat the business with Miriam like some shipboard romance. But his growing bewitchment would not allow that. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online March 2021). < n.c1200 |
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