ship ●●●●●


تلفظ آنلاینOxford 5000 vocabulary |A2|SPEAKING vocabularyWRITING vocabulary

-ship /ʃɪp/ suffix [in nouns]
ship /ʃɪp/ noun [countable]
ship verb (past tense and past participle shipped, present participle shipping)

کشتی
جهاز، با کشتی حمل کردن، فرستادن، سوار کشتی شدن، حمل و نقل کردن، قانون فقه: با کشتی فرستادن یا حمل کردن، بازرگانی: کشتی، علوم نظامی: شناور
ارسال ایمیل

▼ ادامه توضیحات دیکشنری؛ پس از بنر تبلیغاتی ▼

به صفحه تحلیلگران در Instagram بپیوندیددر صفحه اینستاگرام آموزشگاه مجازی تحلیلگران، هر روز یک نکته جدید خواهید آموخت.
نسخه ویندوز دیکشنری تحلیلگران (آفلاین)بیش از 350,000 لغت و اصطلاح زبان انگلیسی براساس واژه های رایج و کاربردی لغت نامه های معتبر
مهندسی صنایع: فرستادن، ارسال کردن، حمل کردن
کشتی

[TahlilGaran] Persian Dictionary

ship
[noun]
Synonyms: vessel, boat, craft
Antonyms: receive
Related Words: direct, freight, export
English Thesaurus: passenger ship, cruise ship, liner, ferry, cargo ship/merchant ship, ...

[TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary

-ship /ʃɪp/ suffix [in nouns]
[Language: Old English; Origin: -scipe]

1.
a particular position or job, or the time during which you have it:
He was offered a professorship (=the job of professor).
in Mr Major’s premiership (=when he was prime minister)
her application for British citizenship

2. the state of having something:
Private car ownership has almost doubled in the past ten years.
Their friendship developed soon afterwards.

3. a particular art or skill:
his superb musicianship
a work of great scholarship-manship

4. all the people in a particular group:
a magazine with a readership of 9,000 (=with 9,000 readers)

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

I. ship1 S2 W2 /ʃɪp/ noun [countable]
[Language: Old English; Origin: scip]

1. a large boat used for carrying people or goods across the sea:
the ship’s captain
a luxury cruise ship
by ship
supplies that came by ship

2. a large spacecraft
jump ship at jump1(16), ⇒ run a tight ship at tight1(5)

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

II. ship2 verb (past tense and past participle shipped, present participle shipping)

1. [transitive] to send goods somewhere by ship, plane, truck etc
ship something out/to/over etc
A new engine was shipped over from the US.

2. [intransitive and transitive] technical to make a piece of computer equipment or software available for people to buy:
They’re now shipping their long-awaited new anti-virus software.
Both products are due to ship at the beginning of June.

3. [transitive] to order someone to go somewhere
ship somebody off/out etc
He was shipped off to a juvenile detention center.
shipping, ⇒ shape up or ship out at shape up(3)

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

ship
noun
ADJ. wooden | enemy | cargo, container, cruise, merchant, pirate, sailing, supply
QUANT. fleet
VERB + SHIP board, come/go aboard, come/go on board | sail | steer | moor The ship is now permanently moored on the Thames in London.
build, launch | load (sth onto), unload (sth from) The dockers were loading the cargo onto the ship.
christen, name | abandon The captain gave the order to abandon ship.
go down with The captain went down with his ship.
scuttle, sink, torpedo | jump Some of the crew jumped ship (= left it illegally) at Gibraltar and disappeared.
SHIP + VERB carry sb/sth a ship carrying more than a thousand people
arrive, dock | anchor, be/lie at anchor Their ship lay at anchor at the mouth of the harbour.
depart, go, leave, put to sea, sail, set sail | be wrecked, collide with sth, hit sth, run aground | capsize | go down, sink
PREP. aboard/on/on board a/the ~ They are now on a ship bound for New York.
by ~ There was no time to send the goods by ship.
~ to/(bound) for
PHRASES the bow/stern of a ship, the captain/crew of a ship, the deck of a ship

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

passenger ship a ship that carries people rather than goods
cruise ship a large ship that people have holidays on
liner a large ship that sails long distances across the ocean:
an ocean liner
a transatlantic liner
ferry a ship that makes short regular journeys between two places:
The ferry operates daily between Hull and Zeebrugge.
cargo ship/merchant ship a ship that carries goods rather than people
container ship a ship that carries goods in special containers which can be put on trucks
freighter a large ship that carries goods
oil tanker a ship that carries oil
supertanker a very large ship that carries oil
barge a ship that carries goods on a river or canal
warship a military ship with guns, used in a war
battleship the largest type of ship used in war, with very big guns on it
aircraft carrier a military ship that planes can fly from or land on
destroyer a small fast military ship with guns, often used for protecting battleships
gunboat a small fast ship with guns on it, often used in shallow water near a coast
submarine a military ship that can stay under water:
a nuclear submarine
minesweeper a military ship used for removing bombs from under water
take to move or go with someone or something from one place to another:
Don’t forget to take your keys.
Shall I take you home?
I took Alice a cup of tea.
bring to take someone or something to the place where you are now:
We’ve brought someone to see you!
Will you bring your photos with you when you come?
transport to take large quantities of goods from one place to another in a plane, train, ship etc:
The plane is used for transporting military equipment.
The coal was transported by rail.
deliver to take goods, letters, newspapers etc to someone’s home or office:
Unfortunately, the package was delivered to the wrong address.
fly to take someone or something somewhere by plane:
The bread is specially flown in from Paris.
ship to take goods from one place to another – this can be by ship, truck, plane, or train:
Half the whisky is shipped to Japan and the US.
carry to take people or goods somewhere – used especially when saying how many people or things, or what kind:
The new plane can carry up to 600 passengers.
The ship was carrying a full cargo of oil.
lead to take someone to a place by going in front of them:
He led Julia through the house to his study.
Roland led the way back to the car in silence.
guide to take someone to a place and show them the way:
Emily guided him through a side gate into a large garden.
escort to take someone to a place and protect or guard them:
The prisoner was escorted into the room by two police officers.
The singer was escorted by her assistant and her bodyguard.
usher to politely lead someone somewhere and show them where to go, especially because it is your job to do this:
We were ushered into the lift by a man in uniform.

[TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus

take to move or go with someone or something from one place to another:
Don’t forget to take your keys.
Shall I take you home?
I took Alice a cup of tea.
bring to take someone or something to the place where you are now:
We’ve brought someone to see you!
Will you bring your photos with you when you come?
transport to take large quantities of goods from one place to another in a plane, train, ship etc:
The plane is used for transporting military equipment.
The coal was transported by rail.
deliver to take goods, letters, newspapers etc to someone’s home or office:
Unfortunately, the package was delivered to the wrong address.
fly to take someone or something somewhere by plane:
The bread is specially flown in from Paris.
ship to take goods from one place to another – this can be by ship, truck, plane, or train:
Half the whisky is shipped to Japan and the US.
carry to take people or goods somewhere – used especially when saying how many people or things, or what kind:
The new plane can carry up to 600 passengers.
The ship was carrying a full cargo of oil.
lead to take someone to a place by going in front of them:
He led Julia through the house to his study.
Roland led the way back to the car in silence.
guide to take someone to a place and show them the way:
Emily guided him through a side gate into a large garden.
escort to take someone to a place and protect or guard them:
The prisoner was escorted into the room by two police officers.
The singer was escorted by her assistant and her bodyguard.
usher to politely lead someone somewhere and show them where to go, especially because it is your job to do this:
We were ushered into the lift by a man in uniform.
for example used when giving an example:
Prices have risen sharply. The price of gasoline, for example, has risen by over 50%.
Nepal has many attractions for visitors. For example, you can go trekking in the Himalayas, or see tigers in Chitwan National Park.
for instance used when giving an example. For instance is slightly less formal than for example and is used more in spoken English:
There were many unanswered questions. For instance, where was the money going to come from?
Some people are really good languages. Take Katie, for instance.
eg/e.g. written used when giving an example or a list of examples. Don’t use eg in formal writing – use the full phrase for example:
Make sure you eat foods that contain protein, e.g. meat, fish, eggs, milk, or cheese.
such as especially written used when giving one or two typical examples when there are many others:
It is difficult to get even basic foods such as bread and sugar.
be a case in point used when emphasizing that someone or something is a good or typical example of what you have just mentioned:
Some birds have returned to Britain after once being extinct here. The return of the osprey is a case in point.

[TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus

ship
ʃɪp
See: give up the ship , landing ship

[TahlilGaran] English Idioms Dictionary


TahlilGaran Online Dictionary ver 18.0
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TahlilGaran : دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی ship ) | علیرضا معتمد , دیکشنری تحلیلگران , وب اپلیکیشن , تحلیلگران , دیکشنری , آنلاین , آیفون , IOS , آموزش مجازی 4.56 : 2113
4.56دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی ship )
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