Uk English Meaning of docks
docks
Other Uk English words related to docks
Nearest Words of docks
Definitions and Meaning of docks in English
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
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
piers,quays,wharves,wharves,floats,jetties,Landings,levees,berths,Dockyards
elongates,expands,extends,increases,lengthens,prolongs,supplements,boosts,enlarges,escalates
dockhands => Dockers, dockets => dockets, dockers => Dockers, dobbins => Dobbins, do the trick => do the trick,