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Boat   /boʊt/   Listen
Boat

noun
1.
A small vessel for travel on water.
2.
A dish (often boat-shaped) for serving gravy or sauce.  Synonyms: gravy boat, gravy holder, sauceboat.
verb
(past & past part. boated; pres. part. boating)
1.
Ride in a boat on water.



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"Boat" Quotes from Famous Books



... the mass, three bearded men, dressed like emigrants, looked up furtively, one yellow-haired man stared vacantly and sadly into the fire which illumed the cabin of the little trading boat, while Helen Matalette sprang forward and threw her ...
— Romance of California Life • John Habberton

... back to visit my middle-aged Christie Johnstone, and more than once saw her and her fellow fish-women haul up the boats on their return after being out at sea. They all stood on the beach clamoring like a flock of sea-gulls, and, as a boat's keel rasped the shingles, rushed forward and seized it; and while the men in their sea clothes, all dripping like huge Newfoundland dogs, jumped out in their heavy boots and took each the way to their several houses, their stalwart partners, hauling all ...
— Records of a Girlhood • Frances Anne Kemble

... declare. Here is Dada, our cargo-boat of moral-maxims, towed against the current of ...
— The Cycle of Spring • Rabindranath Tagore

... that in weighing anchor you have the wind so that you can sail with it full and by, or freer still, right past the walls until you are well into the tide outside. You may tell me that you are so rich and your boat is so big that there have been times when you have anchored in the very open, and that all this does not apply to you. Why, then, your thoughts do not apply to me nor to the little boat I ...
— First and Last • H. Belloc

... state-cabin. Luckily, they were the only inmates of the latter, and had, consequently, full power in their temporary dominions. Had there been co-occupants, a civil war must have been the inevitable result. The ladies had a whole boat-load of citrons, oranges, bananas, and pine-apples; and their father had at least three dozen cases of Chambertin, Laffitte, and Medoc. I at first thought he must be a wine-merchant. At any rate he showed his good taste in stocking himself with such elegant and salutary ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 56, Number 348 • Various


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