(Askeri) ÇİFTE DEMİRLE YATMAK, BAŞ VE KIÇTAN BAĞLAMAK: Bir gemi, deniz uçağı veya mayını, rüzgar ve akıntı tesiriyle hareket edemeyecek şekilde, kablo veya halatlarla, sabit bir cisme bağlamak, demirlemek
Moorings are the ropes, chains, and other objects used to moor a boat. Emergency workers fear that the burning ship could slip its moorings
A fixed fastener or anchor used by boats Boats using moorings don’t have to use traditional anchors this reduces damage to coral reefs
A permanent anchoring device usually supplied by the local marina or harbourmasters Sometimes there is a fee to use them and sometimes they are free They consist of a slab of concrete (most usual) or anchor, attached to a chain with a floating object of some kind that is easily moored to
A mooring is a place where a boat can be tied so that it cannot move away, or the object it is tied to. Free moorings will be available
A place where a boat can be moored Usually a buoy marks the location of a firmly set anchor
Commonly the anchor, chain, buoy, pennant, etc , by which a boat is permanently anchored in one location
In most locations we'll be able to tie up to a mooring instead of anchoring This will give us a more secure nights sleep as you don't have to worry about the anchor slipping when you tied to a mooring Moorings will cost us about $20-$40 night but will be well worth it
1 A place where a boat is permanently anchored; 2 An anchor or weight, permanently attached to the sea floor, with a buoy going to the surface, used to hold the boat in a certain area
The act of confining a ship to a particular place, by means of anchors or fastenings
That which serves to confine a ship to a place, as anchors, cables, bridles, etc
A person of an ethnic group speaking the Hassaniya language, mainly inhabiting Western Sahara, Mauritania, and parts of neighbouring countries (Morocco, Mali, Senegal etc.)
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
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
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
open land usually with peaty soil covered with heather and bracken and moss one of the Muslim people of north Africa; of mixed Arab and Berber descent; converted to Islam in the 8th century; conqueror of Spain in the 8th century secure with cables or ropes; "moor the boat"
one of the Muslim people of north Africa; of mixed Arab and Berber descent; converted to Islam in the 8th century; conqueror of Spain in the 8th century
The Moors were a Muslim people who established a civilization in North Africa and Spain between the 8th and the 15th century A.D. see also mooring. one of the Muslim people from North Africa who entered Spain in the 8th century and ruled the southern part of the country until 1492. a wild open area of high land, covered with rough grass or low bushes and heather, that is not farmed because the soil is not good enough. to fasten a ship or boat to the land or to the bottom of the sea using ropes or an anchor. Any member of the Muslim population of Spain, of mixed Arab, Spanish, and Berber origins. North African Muslims (called by their Latin name Mauri i.e., natives of Roman Mauretania) invaded Spain in the 8th century and, under the Umayyad and Almoravid dynasties, created the great Arab Andalusian civilization in such cities as Córdoba, Toledo, Granada, and Sevilla. The Christian reconquest of Spain under Alfonso VI began in the 11th century; from then until the Moors' final defeat in 1492 and for another century thereafter, many Moors settled as refugees in North Africa. See also Mudejars