dockyard

noun
dock·​yard | \ ˈdäk-ˌyärd How to pronounce dockyard (audio) \

Definition of dockyard

1 : shipyard
2 British : navy yard

Examples of dockyard in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

The normal winter overhaul schedule takes other ferries offline for various periods this winter, and three ferries — including the new Hubbard and Tazlina — will be unusable because of dockyard work. James Brooks, Anchorage Daily News, "Alaska ferry service dodges vetoes but not a big budget cut," 16 July 2019 Twenty-two percent of coastal regions receive a similar degree of artificial illumination, with light emanating from sources such as housing developments, promenades, ports, harbors and dockyards. Meilan Solly, Smithsonian, "Thanks to Light Pollution, We’re Losing Nemo," 11 July 2019 Sailors, many of them already desperately ill, stumbled down the gangplank and into the dockyards of Messina. Anne Thériault, Longreads, "Queens of Infamy: Joanna of Naples," 3 July 2018 To the west, the Pacific Ocean; to the south, Catalina Island and the dockyards of Long Beach; to the north, the San Fernando Valley and the San Gabriels; and all around, a blanket of sparkling city lights. Davy Rothbart, Los Angeles Magazine, "I Learned to Love Griffith Park by Spending 18 Hours Straight There," 23 May 2018 Most Pakistanis and Bangladeshis who came to Britain after the second world war were drawn to existing Muslim communities around cotton mills or dockyards. The Economist, "Britain’s rural Muslims are a minority within a minority," 17 May 2018 One of Hong Kong’s first large-scale private housing developments, Taikoo Shing, was built on the site of Swire Company’s dockyards. Austin Ramzy, New York Times, "Live in a Drainpipe? Five Extreme Ideas to Solve Hong Kong’s Housing Crisis," 26 Mar. 2018 The town was literally ablaze, the dry dock and dockyard buildings completely demolished and everywhere wounded and dead. Marc Wortman, Smithsonian, "A Newly Discovered Diary Tells the Harrowing Story of the Deadly Halifax Explosion," 14 July 2017 Yet these days, thanks to tight NSF budgets, the Langseth typically has another view: a New York dockyard. Paul Voosen, Science | AAAS, "U.S. marine seismologists fear loss of research ship," 21 Aug. 2017

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'dockyard.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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First Known Use of dockyard

1704, in the meaning defined at sense 1

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More Definitions for dockyard

dockyard

noun

English Language Learners Definition of dockyard

: a place where ships are built and repaired