释义 |
Definition of trans-ship in English: trans-ship(also tranship) verbtrans-ships, trans-shipped, trans-shippingtrɑːnzˈʃɪptransˈʃɪptranzˈʃɪptrɑːnsˈʃɪp [with object]Transfer (cargo) from one ship or other form of transport to another. they had to trans-ship the blocks by crane to chartered boats Example sentencesExamples - In practice, though, this object was not realised, since the town's flour mill was content to rely on grain transhipped from Liverpool together with top-up cargoes from Ireland.
- The focus on direct bilateral trade also hides the fact that goods can be and are trans-shipped through third countries.
- Here they would be sold and transhipped for transport by river or sea to other markets, within the province or to more remote destinations.
- While there had always been freight delivered by ship, it had to be transhipped, largely by hand.
- The tolls on transhipped goods could be an important source of income for the government.
- And almost all of India's exports are transhipped through the Colombo port in Sri Lanka.
- The prefabricated materials would then be transhipped to the United Kingdom, where they would be sent to assembly facilities in disused Lancashire cotton factories.
- This time, the concept was to co-opt the Mozambique railways and pipeline company - in return for financial compensation, they would agree not to tranship oil to Rhodesia.
- Nobody knows at this point whether they are the cargo owners, the cargo people bringing it in and transhipping it on, or the carrier; that has yet to be defined.
- Some 52 of them were trans-shipped in the SS Taupo to New Plymouth.
- We then tranship the goods southwards to Felixstowe and Southampton.
- US customs officials were aware Chinese exporters transhipped products, including bedroom furniture, through third countries to avoid duties and controls.
- You would have to trans-ship the sheep from the large ship that they're on now, to barges.
- European ships, bound for the slave coast of Africa, brimmed not simply with produce from their home towns, their hinterland and from Europe, but also with goods transhipped from Asia.
- Horse mackerel is frozen whole at sea, transhipped to reefer vessel on the high seas, and taken directly to its traditional markets in central and west Africa.
- Up to two-thirds of the container cargo handled in Singapore was trans-shipped, meaning that goods arrived in Singapore and were transported to another destination by another vessel.
- She subsequently was given permission to trans-ship to New Zealand, where she appealed against her fate for eight months before finally being allowed to enter Australia.
- The economy relies on transit, transhipping, and banking to earn foreign currency.
- That person would not arrange for it to be trans-shipped out; it would be left on the ship.
- The governor of New South Wales in 1792 sent George III the first kangaroo to be trans-shipped.
Derivatives nountransˈʃɪpm(ə)nt The scheme would save trans-shipment costs at major ports like St. Petersburg or Novorossisk. Example sentencesExamples - Trinidad itself does not have a major drugs problem, but its waters serve as a transhipment point for the drugs coming in from countries in Central America.
- Many administration officials saw him as little more than a leftist leader of a country whose principal exports were refugees in rickety boats and transshipments of Colombian cocaine.
- Merchant ships carried the bulk of the material from the USA in convoys, much of it to British ports for trans-shipment to its final destination.
- All of our trade, the vast majority through transshipment, comes through Florida.
- The second visit found 24 of the 51 factories visited suspected of being involved in transshipment, again close to a 50% suspicion rate.
- Beyond a sound Laotian economy promoting stability in the region, Laos' government has stepped up efforts to combat cultivation, production and transshipment of opium, heroin and marijuana.
- Otherwise, you need about 1,000 custom agents to stop these transshipments of unregulated products coming into the country.
- To complement this lucrative source of traffic from the west, a large terminal facility was built on the Hudson, allowing transhipment to both coastal and ocean shipping.
- At the end of the 1990s, Russian trans-shipments represented 7-9 per cent of the gross domestic product in Estonia, 8-10 per cent in Latvia and 4-6 per cent in Lithuania.
- In the Fish Stocks Agreement this includes a power to inspect vessels in port and to prohibit landing or transhipment of illegally caught stock.
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