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wet dock

noun

, Nautical.
  1. a dock accessible only around the time of high tide and entered through locks or gates.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of wet dock1

First recorded in 1620–30
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Example Sentences

She had learned how Liverpool’s 18th-century wealth from the trans-Atlantic trade, and thus the slave trade, owed to an engineering innovation: the world’s first commercial wet dock, allowing 100 ships to berth regardless of the tide.

During filming in Jamaica, Craig slipped while running on a wet dock and badly injured his ankle.

During filming in Jamaica, Craig slipped while running on a wet dock and badly injured his ankle.

During filming in Jamaica, Craig slipped while running on a wet dock and badly injured his ankle.

Sirens, tugboats and water cannon are expected to mark the Attenborough's departure from builder Cammell Laird's wet dock at Birkenhead.

From BBC

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