0 a kitchen in a ship or aircraft -- (船或飛機上的)廚房
1 (in the past) a long, low ship with sails that was usually rowed by prisoners or slaves -- (舊時常由犯人或奴隷劃槳的)槳帆船
a galley slave 劃槳的奴隷
The remainder is consumed by the de-icing system for the cockpit windows and the water pipes in the galleys and toilets.
Even though other encounters brought more prisoners, only four men were condemned to death, one to the galleys, and one to banishment.
They also sought to discipline and to punish beggars who otherwise would have been expelled or sent to the galleys.
The number of misspellings and mistakes in the references lead one to wonder whether the galley proofs were checked at all.
One obvious aspect of this was the elimination from naval warfare of the galley.
I had an awful dream about that galley of ours.
Between the foremast and mainmast, a new deckhouse was constructed consisting of the galley and a well-fitted-out laboratory.
The etymology is uncertain, there being no early forms, but if the second element is identical with that of galley-beggar it would seem natural to relate it to boggart.