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"seafaring" Definitions
  1. connected with work or travel on the sea
"seafaring" Antonyms

201 Sentences With "seafaring"

How to use seafaring in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "seafaring" and check conjugation/comparative form for "seafaring". Mastering all the usages of "seafaring" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Traditional Sail Merchant Seafaring is a craft to be celebrated.
Fjords are indelibly linked to Norway's identity as a seafaring nation.
Seafaring has been part of the local identity in Sault Ste.
Youngsters' dreams are nourished by seafaring tales told by relatives or neighbours.
That prospect should goad the seafaring world to band together against lawlessness.
The United States has long prided itself on being a seafaring, maritime nation.
Seafaring peoples must stand on the principle that maritime freedom is likewise indivisible.
For all the solitude and hardship, seafaring in the Philippines is a family enterprise.
First of all, take the Netherlands and the UK. We are both seafaring nations.
"Seafaring vessels, beards, and the freedom of the open road pervade his creations," Kauffman says.
This image, which he cultivated, has made him the premier image of the seafaring pirate.
For most Dutch, openness and tolerance are fundamental national traits of their small seafaring country.
Like Homer's Odyssey, Assassin's Creed is a twist-filled, seafaring adventure that feels truly mythic.
For many in Newfoundland, Thanksgiving is the day for the seafaring province's traditional Jiggs dinner.
Tattooing has associations with wealth, crime, or seafaring depending on where in history you look.
But there was another reason for Scientologists' seafaring ways, say scholars who have studied the church.
Finding a clear cause for the spike in deaths of these wild seafaring animals is daunting.
During my seafaring days, it was still pretty limited how far I could roam from port.
The Mediterranean is an expanse ringed by multiple great powers alongside not-so-great seafaring states.
Although China has (modestly) more seafaring vessels than the United States, ours are on average bigger.
Like the best seafaring picture books, this one both evokes deep, unaccountable emotions, and soothes them.
Did we just kick off a crossover plot with the formerly seafaring "Fear the Walking Dead"?
Anyone is welcome to stop and stare and supply their own baggage to this seafaring yarn.
In approximately 2000 CE, an intrepid, seafaring society with roots in Polynesia arrived at the unsettled island.
It's a seafaring multiplayer game where you build a fleet, customize your ships, and battle fellow pirates.
The first settlers may actually have been Gaelic-speaking, seafaring Irish monks fleeing the Vikings in Ireland.
There will be zombies, of course, but the greatest menace will be marauders and other seafaring survivors.
These floating structures attract corals, algae, worms, and other seafaring species, which often evolve into thriving habitats.
"I think it was just the way I was brought up in a seafaring family," he said.
LONDON (Reuters) - Lloyd's of London, the world's oldest insurer of seafaring vessels, is facing its own perfect storm.
Grimsby's seafaring nostalgia was a vivid demonstration of the way emotions can transform politics and affect the economy.
The Viking commitment to a seafaring life was also a commitment to expend a lot of natural resources.
"Pericles," the tale of a seafaring prince who experiences unfathomable loss and unlooked-for redemption, has its problems.
Radical Seafaring continues through July 24 at the Parrish Art Museum (279 Montauk Highway, Water Mill, New York). 
You gotta see this If vintage books are your thing, then prepare your eyes for a seafaring feast.
Unbeknownst to the seafaring boat organizers of this International Boat show, they had almost created the same thing.
The crash took place during Fleet Week, a week-long celebration of the U.S. military's seafaring service members.
Portugal offers a rich history, both in landmarks and in a cuisine that speaks to the nation's seafaring past.
The piscine grace of their seafaring craft can still be seen, at modest scale, in their descendants' fishing boats.
It was recovered shortly after launch when the rocket returned to Earth and landed on SpaceX's seafaring drone ship.
Seafaring communities have crisscrossed the seas between the Indonesian part of Borneo island and the southern Philippines for centuries.
We stopped for an espresso at a cafe overlooking the harbor with its dhows, the Gulf's traditional seafaring vessels.
Above all, where was the seduction, the mystery, the intrigue that was driving the seafaring hero, Odysseus, to distraction?
To historians it's a centuries-long occupation of East African soil by seafaring merchants and middlemen from foreign lands.
Extinct members of the group include massive snakes like Titanoboa and seafaring mosasaurs, which rivaled small whales in size.
"I think it was just the way I was brought up in a seafaring family," he told The Times.
Marinis ($165) is the seafaring perfume of the bunch, with herbal notes of mint, frozen grapes and bay leaves.
Filipinos, particularly young men from provincial villages lured by visions of accomplishment, have dominated seafaring jobs since the 1980s.
Seafaring could have happened by accident as they drifted on rafts or due to intentional navigation, the researchers said.
Seafood appears on most menus, especially bacalhau (salted cod), showing Portugal's seafaring history is evident in its diet, even today.
"This is a seafaring nation," said Martyn Boyers, chief executive of Grimsby Fish Market, which oversees the local fish auction.
Christian Camargo plays the seafaring Prince of Tyre, with Gia Crovatin as his wife and Lilly Englert as his daughter.
Frisia, as the region was known in the 20th century, was a hub of commerce and trade for seafaring entrepreneurs.
What seemed fairly unwearable to begin with, by the last look had show-goers discussing the merits of seafaring headwear.
Then finally, the seafaring dogs and their owners were spotted 900 miles southeast of Japan by a Taiwanese fishing vessel.
According to the Starbucks website, the seafaring theme was based on a Norse woodcut of a siren spreading her tails.
The comedy adventure, which also stars Dwayne Johnson, features a daring teenager on a seafaring mission to save her people.
But this is the fine yarn-spinner London here, and what follows is a rollicking seafaring adventure that feels fresh.
Otherwise they replicated the seafaring of ancient mariners during a 953-day crossing, braving powerful gales and 30-foot crests.
If we wanted to recapture some of that seafaring glory, South Street seemed to be the logical place to do it.
Pricey goods from farflung destinations were dispersed by increasingly sophisticated seafaring vessels, which stimulated the hefty European hunger for colonial wealth.
However it's interpreted, a hundred years after its rebirth, Melville's seafaring story is almost refreshing in its simplicity and shattering tragedy.
One big similarity between space tech and seafaring opportunities is that data collection represents a significant percent of the potential market.
This launch will also include a Falcon 9 booster landing, using SpaceX's seafaring "Of Course I Still Love You" drone ship.
Natasha Oakley, co-creator of A Bikini a Day, got a seafaring lift from her Men's Fitness model BF Gilles Souteyrand.
Historically, Portugal was a great seafaring nation, and Primavera's offerings reflect that legacy, right from the cod-cake and shrimp-cake appetizers.
Piraeus will be the seafaring endpoint of China's 21st Century Maritime Silk Road from East Asia to Africa, Middle East and Europe.
They collected rock, plant and insect samples and observed the first colonization of the island by masked gannets, a large seafaring bird.
Southeast Asia now accounts for the majority of seafaring attacks globally, surpassing the Horn of Africa, according to the International Maritime Bureau.
While Rolls-Royce is mainly known for luxurious and expensive cars, the British engineering company also specializes in engines, aviation, and seafaring.
What makes the Bajau different, Ilardo said, is that their historically seafaring lifestyle and fishing practices may have driven the evolutionary process.
It's a deep dive into Gotland's rugged, seafaring culture and why the island holds such a special place in the Swedish imagination.
The area was popular among seafaring captains who roamed the ocean and harpooned whale, which were prized for their meat and oil.
Decked in seafaring garb, it's the kind of bar to which locals flock for a stiff pour and a $4 pretzel dog.
The satellites also have receivers on board to help them tag and ID any seafaring "ships of interest," according to the mission description.
Under international seafaring law, inspectors can hold a ship back at ports if it lacks certificates or poses some kind of security threat.
Flynn said the plane was in the area because of Fleet Week, a week-long celebration of the U.S. military's seafaring service members.
Ship workers were also preparing for a 48 hour strike starting on Wednesday morning, keeping ferries and ships docked in the seafaring nation.
Algorithms and sensors could be used to interpret weather and seafaring conditions, and automatically adjust speed to meet the scheduled time, he said.
For this voyage he had packed anti-seasickness gum and had a gleam in his eye when he spoke of his seafaring vessel.
The British pound's swoon to 22.97-year lows against the U.S. dollar has created bargain basement prices for luxury seafaring vessels, according to YachtWorld.
Many researchers are arguing we need to ditch the land-first hypothesis of human migration, and look for underwater evidence of a seafaring past.
One of those three vessels, called "Hickory," is the monumental centerpiece of Radical Seafaring, with its 200-foot-tall colorful assemblage of found wood.
The increase in visitors to the lush tropical destination is proving disruptive to the traditional lifestyle of the Mokens, an indigenous nomadic seafaring tribe.
WATER MILL "Radical Seafaring," two-dimensional works, sculptural objects, vessels, models, film and video, off-site commissions and boat trips on East End waterways.
She wants to go west — past where all the maps stop — and is last seen on a boat on some kind of seafaring adventure.
Your choice of art was limited: patriotic symbols, a declaration of love, or an anchor or other recycled image from the craft's seafaring tradition.
Tattoos have long been entwined with American seafaring culture, which developed a repertory over time of anchors, dragons and pinup girls, among other symbols.
Arrange torn leaves on plates and spoon the dressed beets over them, or keep the leaves whole and fill them like miniature seafaring vessels.
But the center booster, which was supposed to land on a seafaring platform called a drone ship, missed its mark and splashed into the ocean.
A new study of ancient DNA could upend our understanding of the seafaring people who travelled vast distances to make their home in the Pacific.
Last year, the seafaring superrich spent $240 billion on these vessels — a 21 percent increase from 2016 — according to the Superyacht Intelligence Agency (which is real).
It's what seafaring types call a heavy lift ship, and it's designed to scoop up all sort of enormous things and haul them around the ocean.
It's also a decidedly darker take on everyone's beloved seafaring rapscallions — there's not a single "Yo Ho" to be heard and nary a rum-soaked joke.
Still, as Black Sea MAP team member Jon Adams told The Washington Post, "this will change our understanding of shipbuilding and seafaring in the ancient world."
"The Boat Builders" will go on display in the Scottish Maritime Museum's exhibition Maritime Perspectives: Collecting Art of a Seafaring Nation, which closes on October 21.
The then-king of Sardinia gave them refuge on Isola di San Pietro, and they brought their seafaring know-how and tabarkino dialect, still spoken by locals.
Verizon said the unnamed company, which has been attacked by armed seafaring pirates several times, contacted its cyber specialists after noticing the looters had changed their tactics.
Our belief in free and fair trade and inclusive economic development is in our blood, as we have always been a seafaring, trading nation, going back centuries.
Most, if any, news coverage of seafaring events is done from land, and is necessarily removed from the lives of those living semi-permanently on these ships.
Until then, for the seafaring sockeye, it takes a ton of energy to travel hundreds of miles, transform, build and defend nest, and compete against other fish.
The success of Mr. Allcard's first trip across the Atlantic established him as one of the world's foremost mariners, as well as a deft chronicler of seafaring.
Thomas Michael Bernard Hoare was born on March 17, 1919, to Thomas and Aileen Hoare, in Calcutta, India, where his seafaring father was an assistant dock master.
But before it goes, it has one final present to leave us: a giant cache of creepy coral bones littering the ocean floor, like a tiny seafaring graveyard.
Providing for loved ones is part of the seafaring dream—sending home money to build houses, invest in farms, set up small businesses or send children to school.
According to a new report from watchdog group Oceans Beyond Piracy, seafaring incidents involving kidnap for ransom jumped last year, with West Africa and Asia becoming prime targets.
Thus in one elaborate transitional scene we find the cast swimming through darkness in bright, eye-popping attire that combines 17th-century seafaring garb with traditional Punjabi dress.
By the eighth century B.C., the Phoenicians, that great seafaring people (whose home was in what is now Lebanon and Syria), had established a colony on the island.
Children are fickle — that love affair with pirates may be all consuming right now, but the whimsical seafaring wallpaper will still be there after the phase has ended.
That appeared to change at the end of Season 6, when the dragon queen teamed with the seafaring Yara and Theon Greyjoy to finally cross the Narrow Sea.
If the new site is confirmed as Norse, it could provide more clues into the historic journey of the Vikings, known for their seafaring techniques, skilled trading and exploration.
NASA doesn't have an exploration vessel, but the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) does, so NASA is partnering with the seafaring agency to study Lo'ihi for 21 days.
EU-member Denmark is among the world's biggest seafaring nations and home to the world's biggest container shipping firm A.P. Moller-Maersk, which sails in the high-tension area.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) scientists collaborated with autonomous vehicle specialists, Saildrone, to test whether the seafaring robot could survive the rough waters, and make successful scientific observations.
Fourteen million people, or about twenty per cent of the population, tuned in, with the pride of a seafaring nation, to explore treasures recovered by a venerable media empire.
Begin at the Nordic Museum, which reopened in May in a striking new zinc-cloaked structure in Ballard, the northwestern neighborhood and traditional home of Seattle's seafaring Scandinavian community.
Startups like Terradepth, Saildrone and Promare have all proposed various autonomous seafaring data collection vehicle designs that could leverage robotics to bring ocean observation at scale closer to home.
During their seafaring adventure, the women reportedly posted photos of themselves drinking out of coconuts in Tahiti and driving dune buggies in Peru, to name a few of their escapades.
Accountancy, medicine, education, espionage, and seafaring all have their own tools and modes of analysis, but none of those approaches was widely promoted as the solution to virtually everything else.
"I can sit and watch in realtime data being collected," said McPhail, and it could more efficiently pick up more samples without the scientists needing to go on seafaring voyages.
The specific proposal that dozens of scientists, engineers, artists, and investors came to discuss was Oceanix City, which aspires to create a scalable platform for the seafaring civilizations of tomorrow.
The Storr Lochs specimen dates back 170 million years to the Middle Jurassic period, and represents the most complete fossilized skeleton of a Mesozoic seafaring reptile ever found in Scotland.
A yellow submarine was found floating near the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge after it was allegedly taken by seafaring thieves for an underwater joyride, ABC affiliate KGO-TV reports.
By late morning on Monday, Captain Frangoulis and his crew - including a seafaring dog picked up at a port years ago - have been at sea for more than 24 hours.
That power applies to actual wars as well as the less visible but consequential projection of unused firepower, whether in deterring Russian or Chinese ambitions or keeping seafaring lanes clear.
But unlike the old myths—where seafaring men became so enthralled by the mysterious lure of the siren song they crashed their ships into the rock—Paul's legend doesn't involve death.
The middle booster, after pushing the payload into space, returned nearly 10 minutes later for a successful landing on SpaceX's seafaring drone ship 400 miles (645 km) off the Florida coast.
Instead of dying out like 2 million years ago, the megalodon—the biggest shark that ever lived—somehow survived and is now going after innocent puppies, aloof beachgoers, and seafaring vessels.
Young revelers can also enjoy a Haunted Adventure Tour, a seafaring quest that will involve surmounting obstacles and outwitting prankster spirits, and a Port of Call Amusement Hall, with traditional games.
Superhydrophobic properties are coveted for a wide range of applications, from protecting electronics from water damage, to reducing fouling on seafaring vessels, to potentially making roads safer in wet and icy conditions.
Starbucks' official stance on its name is that it "[evokes] the romance of the high seas and the seafaring tradition of the early coffee traders," but Bowker is quick to dismiss it.
The hotel's decor scheme is made up of a variety of dark woods, warm brown textiles, and white walls and linens, and recalls the seafaring and shipbuilding days of Old Key West.
I do think that the economy means that the Democratic wave may not be tidal and that Republicans could navigate around a mammoth iceberg, and with that I'll quit the seafaring metaphors.
It's a fast-paced yarn featuring a range of classic adventure-novel tropes: mysterious parentage and secret identities; spying, friendship, and short-lived teenage romance, capped off with a climactic seafaring adventure.
Euron Greyjoy: Since Game of Thrones has been on the air, only two people have ever killed a dragon: The all-powerful and seeming unstoppable Night King, and the seafaring vulgarian Euron Greyjoy.
Needless to say, everyone's favorite pirate has wronged many many seafaring folks on his journeys, but this is the first time that viewers are getting a glimpse into a young Jack Sparrow. E!
WATER MILL "Radical Seafaring," a multidisciplinary exhibition, publication and initiative that will include two-dimensional works, sculptural objects, vessels, models, film and video, off-site commissions, and boat trips around East End waterways.
One might read that, as a proportion of the population, more Icelanders died in the Second World War than Americans did, which means two hundred and thirty, most of them in seafaring accidents.
Coast Guardsmen (as they're called whether they're women or men) are deployed all over the world and have fought and died in every war since 1790, when Alexander Hamilton created this seafaring force.
TO UNDERSTAND how seafaring Britons, in romantic moments, see their island's maritime story, it helps to join the tourists taking a cruise around the harbour that was once home to the world's mightiest navy.
Another factor has played into the city's hands: Because of the country's small population, Portuguese startups launch with an eye on international expansion from day one, continuing the tradition of this small, seafaring country.
Together, they decided the brand should pay homage to city of Seattle, and even more specifically they wanted it to "embody a unique sense of adventure" and "the seafaring history" of the Pacific Northwest.
WATER MILL "Radical Seafaring," a multidisciplinary exhibition, publication, and program initiative that will include two-dimensional works, sculptural objects, vessels, models, film and video, off-site commissions, and boat trips around East End waterways.
That began to change in the 1970s with the founding of the Polynesian Voyaging Society and the construction of the Hokulea, a voyaging canoe made to replicate long-distance seafaring canoes of the past.
Those, along with the Ottoman forts strung along the coast, testify to the centuries-long fight for control of this strategic region by the great seafaring powers of the 245th- through mid-63th-century.
Seafaring startups aren't attracting quite as much attention as their spacefaring cousins, but 2019 still saw a flurry of activity in this sector and 2020 could be an even big year for everything aquatic.
The plight of Coptics has amplified the stakes for Egypt — home to the Suez Canal, a major hub of maritime activity and more than 7 percent of the world's seafaring trade — and regional security.
WetLand continues through June 23 at Long Wharf in Sag Harbor as part of the exhibition Radical Seafaring, which continues through July 24 at the Parrish Art Museum (279 Montauk Highway Water Mill, NY).
For his part, Schwarzenegger plays the same role on "Wonders of the Sea," a project exploring the oceans made in conjunction with Jean-Michel Cousteau, the seafaring explorer and son of the legendary Jacques Cousteau.
But Greyjoy seafaring skills weren't much in evidence last Friday, when Mr. Allen, a lifelong Londoner with a winking laddish charm, was in New York to participate in practice races for next year's America's Cup.
But in the 1990s -- following a mass exodus of Cubans to the United States -- President Bill Clinton amended the rule to state that the US would send back seafaring Cubans who hadn't yet reached US soil.
It's an approach that's created colonoscopy robots that wriggle like worms, cockroach bots that could scurry alongside search-and-rescue missions, and a variety of seafaring creations taking inspiration in everything from sea turtles to jellyfish.
The clip shows the ferry crew using a looped rope to carefully hoist the not-so-seafaring mammal out of the water, until the female wallaby was close enough to the craft to be brought aboard.
"Radical Seafaring," organized by the Parrish Art Museum curator Andrea Grover, brings together 25 artists and collectives who create, as she writes, "land art, only afloat": installations and performances designed to be experienced off dry land.
In a memorable scene, Mr. Brower wrote of Dr. Dyson's reunion with his son, George, who had turned his back on high technology to live in a treehouse in British Columbia and build a seafaring canoe.
He thrives on intricate research and period detail, and for The Lighthouse, he worked with his brother, co-writer Max Eggers, to concoct a seafaring tale that feels as though it's ripped straight from some forgotten myth.
Aside from military uses (think landmines that can fly), it's not difficult to imagine the CRACUNS also being used as sea-based emergency kits, housing vital supplies and equipment waiting for seafaring humans in need of help.
That ship joined the Chinese fleet in 2012 and began its first operations four years later, putting China in the small group of seafaring powers that maintain aircraft carriers, led by the United States, which has 11.
The postwar French president, Charles de Gaulle, saw Britain as different, as a seafaring island nation, and vetoed its application for membership in what was then known as the European Economic Community, in both 1963 and 1967.
Heads up: Disney's seafaring musical adventure Moana, one of 2016's most purely delightful mainstream movies, kid-oriented or otherwise, is now available for repeat viewing (or, if you have young kids, constant, nonstop viewing) on Netflix.
It is a natural British ally, stresses Han ten Broeke, a Dutch MP and Anglophile: another seafaring sort of country; an economy so integrated with Britain's that several big firms (like Unilever and Shell) straddle the North Sea.
The Kennedys were a well-known seafaring family, and the country's 35th president was a war hero who commanded PT-109, which was rammed by a Japanese destroyer, leaving Kennedy and his crew shipwrecked on a Pacific island.
Much like in Black Flag and Rogue, seafaring offers up some of the more exciting and visually pleasing moments of the game, finding lost sunken ruins in the oceans depths or facing off against increasingly aggressive rival ships.
As a Georgia woman named Kensli Taylor Davis posted on Facebook last week, her mother had ordered her a 25th birthday cake themed like Disney's Moana, the family-friendly princess movie about a seafaring teenager, Gothamist pointed out.
Radical Seafaring at the Parrish Art Museum is the first museum survey devoted to boat-based art, stretching from the 1960s to contemporary expeditions like Swoon's Swimming Cities rafts that arrived as uninvited guests at the 2009 Venice Biennale.
It's the type of homespun Wisconsin burgh where Packers loyalty runs deep and fans of their NFC North opponents are in for some good-natured ribbing—especially if they root for a certain team of seafaring plunderers in 2016.
Tied to Bermuda (the shipwreck capital of the world) as the unofficial drink of the island, the D&S was named, as legend has it, by a sailor after ominous seafaring weather (due to its two-toned cloudy coloring).
Clearly these fellows, who twitch and squirm at the thought of the dangerous duties before them, would much rather kick up their heels and risk a hamstring injury than scratch so much as a pinkie finger chasing seafaring miscreants.
Equally important, naval strength depended on a broader dual-use infrastructure of seafaring expertise, shipbuilding capability, overseas possessions and ports producing economic value to support and fund a Navy, and a nation that saw itself as a seapower state.
Perhaps they should: The Starbucks logo — inspired by an old woodcut of a mythical siren –– was born from the rich marine history of Seattle, where rugged seafaring was a way of life long before grunge bands made the city forever cool.
I really couldn't tell you how I ended up in that get-up, but I do remember that the presence of costuming in the bedroom — even that of a damp, seafaring mammal — added a whole lot of fun to the experience.
The lineup includes some productions new to the repertoire, like a staging of Puccini's "Manon Lescaut" by Adolf Shapiro, and a new version of Benjamin Britten's "Billy Budd," a seafaring opera set during the Napoleonic conquests, directed by David Alden.
Why, among the global seafaring figures atop the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, across from Battery Park in Manhattan, is there one representing Belgium (whose coast is only about 40 miles long and was not known predominantly as a maritime nation)?
Horie, a national hero in Japan hailed as the seafaring version of U.S. aviator Charles Lindbergh, reached Tokyo in 148 days, setting a Guinness World Record for the fastest-ever crossing of the Pacific Ocean in a solar-powered boat.
Mr. Allcard began his seafaring life in earnest after the war, setting sail whenever he pleased, earning money over the years as a writer, charter skipper, hotel maintenance manager and rehabilitater of old wooden boats, which he sold for a profit.
The seafaring New Yorkers we spoke to on Monday could not have been more pleased with their new commute on the Urban Journey, the name second graders at P.S. 69 bestowed on the ferry that left Rockaway at 5:32 a.m.
It's a stark way to drive home just how much technology has advanced in the last four centuries, but also a key demonstration of autonomous seafaring technology, put together by marine research and exploration organization Promare and powered by IBM technology.
Specifically, the seafaring MOSAiC experiment — in which a hardy German icebreaking vessel will intentionally get trapped in a floating mass of ice and drift through the Arctic for a year — intends to gather data about the air, ice, and ocean.
MADRID (Reuters) - Spain has withdrawn a frigate from a U.S.-led naval group in the Gulf because it was now focusing on alleged threats from Iran rather than an agreed objective to mark an historic seafaring anniversary, the Spanish government said on Tuesday.
All seafaring nations have a stake in freedom to use the sea for mercantile and military endeavors; all of them should help defend freedom of the sea where it is in peril, including the contested Sea of Azov and South China Sea.
"As a seafaring nation, it is essential to Denmark that freedom of navigation is sustained," he said, adding that a final decision would still need to be discussed in parliament once there was "a clearer picture of the exact tasks and partners".
Weeks later, after a frenzy of coding, rigging, and seasickness, Project Pequod — renamed at the last to the allegedly catchier Twitter I will not dwell overlong on the alarums and excursions of our subsequent seafaring; the rise and fall of Captain Costolo; Queequeeg's fate.
The company said in a tweet that its droneship, a seafaring platform used to land rocket boosters after flight so they can be reused and save SpaceX money, suffered an "electrical issue" and it forced the company to push launch back by another 24 hours.
The return of Yara Greyjoy and her father Balon gives book fans hope that a story arc previously spelled out in Martin's last two books, "A Feast for Crows" and "A Dance with Dragons," involving their seafaring family, may feature more prominently in season 6.
As a water-based structure, it recalls Robert Smithson's idea for a floating island to travel around Manhattan — one of the projects Radical Seafaring surveys — that became a reality in 2005 when a tugboat pulled a barge of trees and plants through the city's waterways.
After her seafaring adventures establishing trade routes to China on her ship, the Wonder, she returns to England to find that a rejected suitor, Hamish (Leo Bill), has maneuvered the sale of her precious ship by persuading Alice's mother (Lindsay Duncan) to agree to a dubious deal.
But having all the exotic and vintage illustrations in one place — fantastic creatures (mostly dogs), seafaring vessels (and men), far-flung gardens (and the things that grow in them) — is a warm comfort on a cold winter day, perfect with a bottomless mug of marshmallow-y cocoa.
Bobbing on the Peconic River for select weeks in June, the boat is an off-site commission for Radical Seafaring, an exhibition currently at the Parrish Art Museum that examines the history and future of water-based projects that deal with exploration, escape, fieldwork, and speculation.
The maritime giant that employed him, responsible for 76 ports on all sides of the earth and nearly 800 seafaring vessels, including container ships carrying tens of millions of tons of cargo, representing close to a fifth of the entire world's shipping capacity, was dead in the water.
What's more, SpaceX recovered the booster via controlled landing on its seafaring drone ship "Of Course I Still Love You" in the Atlantic Ocean, which means it's possible the booster could be turned around and re-used still another time — they're designed to support up to 10 flights in total.
Muir, revered today as the founder of the Sierra Club and an early advocate for national parks, was largely unknown to America's reading public in 1879 when he first departed San Francisco bound for Alaska's mysterious Inside Passage, a seafaring route through the densely islanded panhandle of America's northernmost territory.
"We are gathered here in Portsmouth today just a short distance from HMS Victory, a flagship of our seafaring past and a reminder of the debt we owe to the Royal Navy which for more than 500 years has protected the people of this country and our interests around the world," she said.
Grover writes: The phenomenological works in Radical Seafaring represent a new form of expression that is particularly powerful and timely as climatologists anticipate changes in weather patterns, rising sea levels, and impacts on coastal zones — especially when one considers that half the world's population lives within two hundred miles of a seacoast.
The pilots are the closers of the door-to-door world, a breed apart, with coveted jobs that pay some of the highest salaries in the marine business as they use state-of-the-art mobile navigation tech combined with a deft feel for ships, tides and wind that is as old as seafaring itself.
Indeed, bronze's seafaring connotations make it a natural for diver watches, as Jack Forster, the editor in chief of Hodinkee, pointed out, given that the metal (typically a blend of copper and tin) has been used in marine applications like ship propellers and naval cannons for centuries because of its resistance to saltwater corrosion.
There's the little conversations with animal neighbors, the little jokes they tell and the jokes when you catch fish and bugs, the appearances of characters like Gulliver the seafaring pelican who routinely washes up on beaches and Sahara the camel who sells wallpaper and flooring, and of course the ever-helpful Tom Nook and Isabelle.
And most importantly of all: the reason those animals are able to be wild and free and not ruined by the machinations of capitalist seafaring enterprise is because Monterey Bay is a US National Marine Sanctuary—one of the largest US marine sanctuaries, actually—which means drilling and prospecting and dumping and most other commercial activities are prohibited.
Arts | Long Island Long Island history is steeped in water, an element that surrounds the region, so the Parrish Art Museum as a host for "Radical Seafaring," an exhibition on view through July 22013 that takes on the historical, environmental, political and aesthetic aspects of our oceans, inlets, rivers and waterways, makes a lot of sense.
The word tureen has appeared in 10 New York Times articles in the past year, including on March 13 in the dining review "Portugal's Heritage, Soaked in Wine and Garlic: A Review of Primavera Pub in Hartford" by Rand Richards Cooper: Historically, Portugal was a great seafaring nation, and Primavera's offerings reflect that legacy, right from the cod-cake and shrimp-cake appetizers.
The idea of stowing away must be as ancient as the first human hitching a ride on a seafaring vessel out of old Mesopotamia, but in the covfefe clatter of our times, I find myself more and more fixated on such stories: The 23-year-old in the wheel well of a plane ride from New Delhi to London whose body temperature dropped, causing him to pass out until he regained consciousness on the ground at Heathrow.
The autonomous Mayflower will be decked out with solar panels, as well as diesel and wind turbines to provide it with its propulsion power, as it attempts the 3,220-mile journey from Plymouth in England, to Plymouth in Massachusetts in the U.S. The trip, if successful, will be among the first for full-size seafaring vessels navigating the Atlantic on their own, which Promare is hoping will open the doors to other research-focused applications of autonomous seagoing ships.

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