-
interchanges or
Nodes (e.g.
train stations, airports, etc.).
Cargo is
shipped under a
single contract but
performed using at
least two
different modes...
- A
ship is a
large vessel that
travels the world's
oceans and
other navigable waterways,
carrying cargo or p****engers, or in
support of
specialized missions...
- A
ship of the line was a type of
naval warship constructed during the Age of Sail from the 17th
century to the mid-19th century. The
ship of the line...
- the
Ship may
refer to: "Don't give up the
ship," the
dying command of
James Lawrence in 1813
aboard USS Chesapeake (1799) "Don't Give Up the
Ship," words...
-
Cruise ships are
large p****enger
ships used
mainly for vacationing.
Unlike ocean liners, they
typically embark on round-trip
voyages to
various ports...
-
Ship commissioning is the act or
ceremony of
placing a
ship in
active service and may be
regarded as a
particular application of the
general concepts...
- Philpott, Tom, eds. (2015), "Iran", IHS Jane's
Fighting Ships 2015–2016, Jane's
Fighting Ships (116th Revised ed.), Coulsdon: IHS Jane's, p. 388, ISBN 9780710631435...
-
States Navy has
approximately 470
ships in both
active service and the
reserve fleet; of
these approximately 50
ships are
proposed or
scheduled for retirement...
-
Ship breaking (also
known as
ship recycling,
ship demolition,
ship dismantling, or
ship cracking) is a type of
ship disposal involving the
breaking up...
-
capabilities of
ships classified as
frigates have varied. The name
frigate in the 17th to
early 18th
centuries was
given to any full-rigged
ship built for speed...