A place in a ship to sleep in; a long box or shelf on the side of a cabin or stateroom, or of a railway car, for sleeping in.
To give an anchorage to, or a place to lie at; to place in a berth; as, she was berthed stem to stern with the Adelaide.
To allot or furnish berths to, on shipboard; as, to berth a ship's company.
A place of anchorage where a vessel lies. A place in which a seaman sleeps, usually a bed or bunk built into the vessel.
Sleeping quarters usually for crew.
Space at a wharf where a ship docks or anchors; to bring a ship to a berth
A location in a harbour or port designed for mooring a vessel, often indicated by a number, code or name.
Bed, usually attached to a wall within the passenger's cabin. They may fold up against the wall when not in use. Also a space where ships dock, as in the berths (or slips) of a port. Dock, pier or quay (key).
Dock, pier or quay. Also means 'bed' onboard ship
The structure where a vessel is secured for the loading and unloading cargo.
A location in a port where a vessel can be moored. A bed on board a vessel.
The ship's placement at a dock; a margin of safety, as in, "allow a wide berth"; a bed
1. The dock or anchorage occupied by a boat; 2. A place where a person sleeps
Dock, pier or quay (key); or, the bed or beds within the passengers' cabins
Where a ship is moored up.
The place where a vessel lies at a wharf.
a place where a craft can be made fast
a bed on a ship or train; usually in tiers
secure in or as if in a berth or dock; "tie up the boat"
come into or dock at a wharf; "the big ship wharfed in the evening"
a nautical term for a bed on a boat
The appointed place in a dock, at a quay or at a jetty where the vessel may load, discharge, or lay.
A ship's allocated area of wharf.
a ship's anchorage or place alongside a wharf.
(verb) To bring a ship to a berth. (noun) The wharf space at which a ship docks. A wharf may have two or three berths, depending on the length of incoming ships.
1)A narrow sailor's bed or the slip where a boat is moored
The area allotted to accommodate a vessel alongside a wharf, or the area in which a vessel swings when at anchor.
A bed; or the place where the ship is docked in port
place alongside a quay where a ship loads or discharges cargo, or in the case of a lay-by berth, waits until a loading or discharging berth is available. This term is also frequently used to signify places alongside a quay each of which is capable of accommodating only one ship at a time.
Dock or pier. Berth (2) - The bed(s) within the passengers' cabins.
nautical term for bed in your cabin or where vessel docks in port.
Nautical term describing a ship's place at a Wharf. Also a sleeping place on board.
Area of a port where a ship can be moored.
1. A bed on a ship, usually attached to the bulkhead (qv). 2. By extension, a passenger`s stateroom. 3. The space on a dock at which a ship or boat is moored. See also slip.
1. a cabin or a place to sleep in a ship; 2. a place for mooring a ship in port or anchoring
A bed on a boat, or a space in a port or harbour where a vessel can be tied up.
The place that a ship lies when at anchor or moored at a wharf or pier.
Sleeping accommodations that are either double beds, twin beds, or bunk bed arrangements on trains or ships.
A sleeping bunk on a train.
There are two definitions: the dock or pier where you embark or debark from the ship; the bed in which you sleep onboard the ship.
The place beside a docking area where the ship is secured and cargo can be loaded or unloaded.
sleeping bunk aboard the boat
A place in which a vessel is moored or secured.
A place to sleep or for a ship to secure to.
A bed on a boat. Also, a place where a boat may be moored.
A bed on a common carrier, often but not necessarily built in; also a space at a wharf for a ship to dock or anchor.
A place to sleep aboard a boat. Also, a boat slip.
Docking space for the ship; also a bed inside the ship
The bed, or beds within the passengers cabin.
The allocated place for a ship or person
A bed on a train or a ship.
Area where the ship is placed in the dock and also the margin of safety when allowing for dock space for the ship.
(1) a place for a person to sleep. (2) a place where the ship can be secured. (3) a safe and cautious distance, such as “We gave the shark a wide berth.
The place where you but the boat on a dock.
The water area, terminal or wharf and mooring facilities used by a vessel.
A space to anchor/moor the vessel, a build-in bed
A location in a port where a vessel can be moored often indicated by a code or name.
A bed or bunk on the vessel, usually built in.
bed or bunk; the position where a ship ties up or anchors, a position of employment aboard a ship; a margin of safety in the distance from which another vessel or object is passed, as in "giving wide berth"
1) A place where a boat or ship can be secured. 2) A safe, cautious distance, as in to give something a "wide berth."
Where a ship is docked or tied up; also a place to sleep aboard; a bunk or bed.