Usar "seaport" en una oración
seaport oraciones de ejemplo
seaport
1. It was fully dark when they reached the Lübeck Bucht, the mouth of the bay that had permitted the city its role as a thriving seaport since Hanseatic times
2. Since their current location was also a seaport, he suggested we go there by sea
3. "Since we can't hit the rail lines that came south out of China or the seaport at Haiphong or even completely take out the marshalling yards near Hanoi, we have to go after the trucks as they come down these roads in Pack One and through the passes into Laos
4. Mayagüez, a seaport city on the western coast of Porto Rico, third insize of the island
5. “Arianell, where does this exit? Near a seaport where we can book passage back home?”
6. “Just another hour’s drive to the Brine Wind Seaport,” said the Sekku
7. The other four men thought about going south to Myra, a seaport town, and maybe head back towards Galilee, by way of ship
8. I traveled to just about every city and seaport of that region, and several times to the far away ones, once even going to Rome, but not for long stay
9. Located in the upper part of Italy’s boot-heel, south and a bit inland from the busy Adriatic seaport of Bari, Matera is the oldest and is believed to be the first agricultural community ever founded by humans
10. “Nome” is the name of a seaport settlement on the
11. arable land, a warm water seaport, treasure
12. important seaport on the Mediterranean at the month of theGuadalaviar or Turia
13. The architecture was different than any I had seen before, but it was done well and from what I could see of the size of the city and the busy seaport we were approaching, it appeared that these people’s cities could match any of the Zoarinian port cities in grandeur, perhaps even exceed them
14. It was an old seaport, not too large, not too small
15. "But how did you land at Osuna, senora," asked Don Quixote, "when it is not a seaport?"
16. large kingdom, which had for its capital one of the finest seaport towns in the
17. We have the news at every seaport already, and a reward will be offered before evening
18. What Kynt’s suggesting now is that he do basically what Duke Harless did with Thesmar … with the obvious difference that Fairkyn isn’t a seaport and the AOG can’t ship in supplies and reinforcements by sea
19. From under the seaward gate, across the dusty, arid plain, interspersed with low bushes, he saw, more than a mile away, the ugly enormity of the Custom House, and the two or three other buildings which at that time constituted the seaport of Sulaco
20. In my brother's clothes I could walk by night unobserved as far as Liverpool, and in that great seaport I would soon find some means of leaving the country
21. The Harchongians had no longer seen any need to control the Narrows, now that they’d deprived Sodar of the only thing approaching a seaport it had ever had, and the fortresses hadn’t been manned in almost a century and a half
22. of the gentle blood of the whole continent could be found in that small seaport city, a
23. Thus his nails and modesty were comparable to those of most gentlemen; though his ambition had been educated only by the opportunities of a clerk and accountant in the smaller commercial houses of a seaport
24. He thought the rural Featherstones very simple absurd people, and they in their turn regarded his "bringing up" in a seaport town as an exaggeration of the monstrosity that their brother Peter, and still more Peter's property, should have had such belongings
25. From his earliest employment as an errandboy in a seaport, he had looked through the windows of the moneychangers as other boys look through the windows of the pastrycooks; the fascination had wrought itself gradually into a deep special passion; he meant, when he had property, to do many things, one of them being to marry a genteel young person; but these were all accidents and joys that imagination could dispense with
26. A royal ordinance erected Angouleme into a naval school; for the Duc d'Angouleme, being lord high admiral, it was evident that the city of Angouleme had all the qualities of a seaport; otherwise the monarchical principle would have received a wound
27. One is even in Mystic Seaport
28. 13 26 Marseille: 'Marseilles,' the greatest seaport in France and the metropolis of the south, only sixty miles from Tarascon
29. And especially would this seem to be a matter of course, in the case of vessels owned in one seaport, and whose captains, officers, and not a few of the men are personally known to each other; and consequently, have all sorts of dear domestic things to talk about
30. For how otherwise can it be, when we consider that all the navigation business, from one end to the other of these United States, is totally stopped, excepting a small remnant of our coasting trade, and that remnant under very great embarrassments; and all that numerous class of our citizens, dependent on commerce, deprived of their usual means of gaining a livelihood, and in consequence thereof thousands of them have been obliged to live on their former earnings, and consume that little property they had treasured up for their future support? And if the embargo is continued, the inevitable consequence must be, bankruptcy to many of our merchants, and absolute distress, misery, and want, to a large proportion of our citizens who live in the seaport towns, and great embarrassments to all classes of citizens throughout our country
31. The works of defence for our seaport towns and harbors have proceeded with as much activity as the season of the year and other circumstances would admit
32. We have heretofore paid the highest price for every article; we have given double wages for labor; and instances might be mentioned, when the workmen were transported in stage coaches, at an enormous expense, from our large seaport towns to the navy yard of this city
33. Look at France, separated from her enemy by a narrow channel, without vessels to meet the fleets of England on the water, and still she is unable to burn the seaport towns of France or invade the French territories, or in any way to make an impression upon her
34. I would fortify our seaport towns; station our gunboats and frigates along our coast, to protect us at home
35. The price of such a paper is as well known in the great seaport towns as is that of your stocks
36. We virtually held out to our great commercial cities—to Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Charleston—the same language as Bonaparte had held to his own cities: "I know that you are suffering, and unhappy; that the grass is growing in your streets; that the ships at your wharves are rotting, until they are fit only for fuel; that your trade is dwindling only to nothing; but what is all that to my continental system? What are a few seaport towns—enterprising, wealthy, and prosperous, as indeed they are—what are they, compared to my continental system?" And, sir, what was our "restrictive" system? Similar in point of effect—certainly cotemporaneous in point of time—to Bonaparte's "continental system