0 an open area of hills covered with rough grass, especially in Britain -- 高沼;荒野;曠野
the Yorkshire moors 約克郡高沼
1 to tie a boat so that it stays in the same place -- (使)停泊,繫泊,繫留
2 a member of the group of Muslim people from North Africa who ruled Spain from 711 to 1492 -- 摩爾人(西元711至1492年統治西班牙的來自北非的穆斯林)
But not on a third, that "remaining moored at the dock" is not an action.
An allotment of part of the moor was planned so that peat-cutting could continue when the rest of the moor was enclosed.
Despite these improvements, substantial stretches of marsh, moor and heath remained around 1700.
The company's plan was to use her as an accommodation ship, moored in the copper mine's harbour.
Various building-platforms are ruins of rectangular buildings are distributed along this axis, and hollow-ways lead from it onto the moor above, to the north.
Unlike the remote northern grouse moors, such estates offered potentially rich pickings for poachers.
In this context we may refer to the rich archaeological evidence for a long-term tradition of ritual depositions and ceremonial activities in moors.
It focuses on the ethical questions that moored nationalist thought and practice, and were premised on particular understandings of the self.