0 an area of water in a port that can be closed off and that is used for putting goods onto and taking them off ships or repairing ships --
The strike has led to the cancellation of some ferry services and left hundreds of passengers stranded at the docks.
1 the place in a criminal law court where the accused person sits or stands during the trial: --
2 a common wild plant with large wide leaves that grows in some northern countries such as Britain: --
3 a docking station --
5 If a ship docks, it arrives at a dock and if someone docks a ship, they bring it into a dock: --
Two liposomes are docked to the bilayer in the view field as indicated by the synaptobrevin dyes.
Eventually, waves encounter a dock, a pier, or the hull of an imaginary boat in which the listener is invited to travel.
On the other side, in the plantations and docks, where labour agents were both powerful and pivotal, needs of capital were of a different kind.
The benefit to the ship may well have exceeded the damage to the dock.
In this scenario, docking and opening of the gate that normally keeps hemichannels closed would be part of the same process.
Prediction of the docked complex by a complete systematic search.
Both the gradient and categorical approaches can deal with the most common situation, where the only licit docking site is right at the edge.
The disruption of oil supplies, compounded by a national docks strike, precipitated the long awaited sterling crisis.