moorage geminin bağlanacağı yer veya şey

listen to the pronunciation of moorage geminin bağlanacağı yer veya şey
Turkish - English
moor
To fix or secure, as a vessel, in a particular place by casting anchor, or by fastening with cables or chains; as, the vessel was moored in the stream; they moored the boat to the wharf
To secure or fix firmly
A game preserve consisting of moorland
{v} to fasten, place, be fixed with anchors
An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a heath
{f} tie a boat, secure a boat; anchor a boat; secure with ropes
secure with cables or ropes; "moor the boat"
To attach a boat to a mooring, dock, post, anchor, etc
A moor is an area of open and usually high land with poor soil that is covered mainly with grass and heather. Colliford is higher, right up on the moors Exmoor National Park stretches over 265 square miles of moor
To cast anchor; to become fast
To secure a ship with mooring ropes to shore OR to secure a ship with anchors and cables Or to secure a ship to mooring buoys
To moor is to lie with two anchors down Vessels are said to moor to a dock when well made fast with several lines
To secure a ship to a dock
come into or dock at a wharf; "the big ship wharfed in the evening"
secure in or as if in a berth or dock; "tie up the boat
{i} infertile or undeveloped land; swampy land; land reserved for hunting
To secure, or fix firmly
If you moor a boat somewhere, you stop and tie it to the land with a rope or chain so that it cannot move away. She had moored her barge on the right bank of the river I decided to moor near some tourist boats. = tie up
n (ME mor, fr OE mor; akin MD moer, mire, swamp) chiefly British: an extensive area of open rolling infertile land consisting of sand, rock, or peat usually covered with heather, bracken, coarse grass and sphagnum moss; a boggy area of wasteland usually dominated by grasses and sedges growing in a thick layer of peat