docks Sentence Examples

  1. The fishing boats were safely moored at the bustling docks.
  2. The cruise ship slowly pulled into the docks, its passengers eager to disembark.
  3. The towering cranes on the docks loaded and unloaded cargo ships efficiently.
  4. The sun glinted off the water as the yachts bobbed at the private docks.
  5. The fishermen spent hours mending their nets at the cozy docks.
  6. The waterfront was lined with restaurants and cafes overlooking the vibrant docks.
  7. The old wooden docks had been weathered by years of storms and tides.
  8. The docks were a hub of activity as workers unloaded produce from distant lands.
  9. The dilapidated docks were a poignant reminder of the town's former maritime glory.
  10. The sailboat gently drifted into the sheltered docks, seeking refuge from the approaching storm.

docks Meaning

docks

to fine by a deduction of wages, to come into or alongside a dock, the part of an animal's tail left after it has been shortened, to bring or come into or alongside a dock, a place (such as a wharf or platform) for the loading or unloading of materials, the place in a criminal court where a prisoner stands or sits during trial, the combining site of a molecular receptor see receptor sense b, a wharf or platform for loading and unloading, a device in which a smartphone, digital camera, etc., is placed for charging, accessing a power supply, or connecting to another electronic device, to penalize by depriving of a benefit ordinarily due, to remove part of the tail of, any of a genus (Rumex) of coarse weedy plants of the buckwheat family having long taproots and sometimes used as potherbs, slip entry 2 sense 1b, to connect an electronic device (such as a computer or a digital camera) to another device, a usually artificial basin to receive ships that has gates to control the water height, to subject to a deduction, to cut off the end of a body part of, on trial, to take away a part of, to haul or guide into or alongside a dock, to join (two spacecraft) mechanically while in space, to deprive of something due because of a fault, to cut (part of an animal, such as the ears or a tail) short, a usually wooden pier used as a landing place or moorage for boats, to combine with a molecular receptor see receptor sense b, any of several usually broad-leaved weedy plants (as of the genus Silphium), the solid part of an animal's tail as distinguished from the hair, a usually artificial basin or enclosure for the reception of ships that is equipped with means for controlling the water height, any of a genus of coarse weedy plants which are related to the buckwheat and some of which are cooked for food, a usually wooden pier used as a landing place or moorage, to cut off the end of, to combine with a molecular receptor, any plant of the genus Rumex, the place in a court where a prisoner stands or sits during trial, to join (as two spacecraft) mechanically while in space, to become docked, the place in a criminal court where a prisoner stands or sits during trial compare bar, bench, jury box, sidebar, stand

FAQs About the word docks

to fine by a deduction of wages, to come into or alongside a dock, the part of an animal's tail left after it has been shortened, to bring or come into or along

wharfs, piers, wharves, quays, floats, landings, levees,jetties, quais, slips

elongates, supplements,extends, expands, increases, lengthens, prolongs, protracts, maximizes,enlarges

The fishing boats were safely moored at the bustling docks.

The cruise ship slowly pulled into the docks, its passengers eager to disembark.

The towering cranes on the docks loaded and unloaded cargo ships efficiently.

The sun glinted off the water as the yachts bobbed at the private docks.