Need another word that means the same as “dock”? Find 25 synonyms and 30 related words for “dock” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Dock” are: pier, wharf, wharfage, loading dock, dockage, docking facility, bob, bobtail, sorrel, sour grass, harbour, marina, waterfront, port, anchorage, tail, moor, berth, land, beach, anchor, drop anchor, put in, tie up
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “dock” as a noun can have the following definitions:
anchorage | The condition of being secured to a base. The mother provides emotional anchorage for the entire family. |
bob | A brief curtsy. She could only manage a slight bob of her head. |
bobtail | A docked tail of a horse or dog. |
dockage | Accommodation or berthing of ships in docks. |
docking facility | Any of certain coarse weedy plants with long taproots, sometimes used as table greens or in folk medicine. |
harbour | A place on the coast where ships may moor in shelter, especially one protected from rough water by piers, jetties, and other artificial structures. The westerly wind kept us in harbour until the following afternoon. |
loading dock | The power output of a generator or power plant. |
marina | A fancy dock for small yachts and cabin cruisers. |
pier | A wall between windows or other adjacent openings. |
port | A place seaport or airport where people and merchandise can enter or leave a country. Belfast s port facilities. |
sorrel | A sweet red drink made from the sepals of the flowers of the red sorrel. |
sour grass | The property of being acidic. |
waterfront | A part of a town that borders the sea or a lake or river. A hotel on the waterfront. |
wharf | A level quayside area to which a ship may be moored to load and unload. |
wharfage | Accommodation provided at a wharf for the loading, unloading, or storage of goods. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “dock” as a verb can have the following definitions:
anchor | Moor a ship to the sea bottom with an anchor. She anchored a television documentary series in the early 1980s. |
beach | Land on a beach. Competitive procurement seems to have beached several firms. |
berth | Provide with a berth. The ship berthed at Plymouth. |
bob | Ride a bobsled. She bobbed her head. |
drop anchor | Leave undone or leave out. |
land | Bring a fish to land with a net or rod. The co pilot landed the plane. |
moor | Secure with cables or ropes. Moor the boat. |
put in | Put into a certain place or abstract location. |
tail | Provide with a tail. Her calligraphy was topped by banners of black ink and tailed like the haunches of fabulous beasts. |
tie up | Perform a marriage ceremony. |
beach | Of an angler land a fish on a beach. The ship beached near the port. |
boat | Transport someone or something in a boat. They boated through fjords. |
canoe | Travel in or paddle a canoe. Canoe along the canal. |
deck | A floor of a double decker bus. A cassette deck. |
dinghy | A small boat for recreation or racing, especially an open boat with a mast and sails. |
embarkation | The act of passengers and crew getting aboard a ship or aircraft. |
ferry | Transport by ferry. Ambulances ferried the injured to hospital. |
ferryboat | A boat that transports people or vehicles across a body of water and operates on a regular schedule. |
harbour | Of a ship or its crew moor in a harbour. He might have harboured in Falmouth. |
hull | Hit and pierce the hull of a ship with a missile. The ship was being hulled and all would die. |
moor | A moor preserved for shooting. A grouse moor. |
motorboat | Ride in a motorboat. |
navigation | The passage of ships. Columbus corrected his westward course by celestial navigation. |
oakum | Loose fibre obtained by untwisting old rope, used especially in caulking wooden ships. |
oar | Propel with or as if with oars row. Oaring the sea like madmen. |
pier | A platform on pillars projecting from the shore into the sea, typically incorporating entertainment arcades and places to eat. |
port | Land at or reach a port. Port a rifle. |
quay | Wharf usually built parallel to the shoreline. |
regatta | A meeting for boat races. |
sail | The broad fin on the back of a sailfish or of some prehistoric reptiles. The boat can no longer carry that area of sail. |
sailing | The action of sailing in a ship or boat. The company operates five sailings a day from Ramsgate to Dunkirk. |
seaside | A place by the sea, especially a beach area or holiday resort. A seaside town. |
ship | Place on board a ship. The ship left England with a crew of 36. |
shore | Arrive on shore. I made for the shore. |
skiff | A light rowing boat or sculling boat, typically for one person. |
steamboat | A boat that is propelled by a steam engine, especially (in the US) a paddle-wheel craft of a type used on rivers in the 19th century. |
tug | Tow a ship by means of a tugboat. The ships were tugged off the reefs. |
tugboat | A powerful small boat designed to pull or push larger ships. |
waterfront | A part of a town that borders the sea or a lake or river. A hotel on the waterfront. |
yacht | Travel in a yacht. An eighty five foot diesel yacht. |
The synonyms and related words of "Brag" are: blow, bluster, boast, gas, gasconade, shoot a…
The synonyms and related words of "Pierce" are: thrust, make a hole in, penetrate, puncture,…
The synonyms and related words of "Weary" are: aweary, tired, tired out, exhausted, fatigued, overtired,…
The synonyms and related words of "Kick" are: complain, kvetch, plain, quetch, sound off, give…
The synonyms and related words of "Useless" are: futile, pointless, purposeless, impractical, vain, in vain,…
Want to describe something with adjectives that start with 'J'? Though they are not numerous,…