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"Ship" and its derivatives in this context have since come to be in widespread usage. "Shipping" refers to the phenomenon; a "ship" is the concept of a fictional couple; to "ship" a couple means to have an affinity for it in one way or another; a "shipper" or a "fangirl/boy" is somebody significantly involved with such an affinity; and a "shipping war" is when two ships contradict each other ...
A blue and white flag (the flag for the letter P) hoisted at the foretrucks of ships about to sail. Formerly a white ship on a blue ground, but later a white square on a blue ground. blue water 1. That part of the ocean lying more than a few hundred nautical mile s from shore, and thus beyond the outer boundary of green water. 2.
SS United States, last winner of the Blue Riband Cunard's Mauretania. She held the Blue Riband for the second-longest period of any ship, for 20 years, from 1909 to 1929. The Blue Riband (/ ˈ r ɪ b ə n d /) is an unofficial accolade given to the passenger liner crossing the Atlantic Ocean in regular service with the record highest average speed.
Romance of the Sea was a clipper ship launched in 1853. [1] [2 ... Romance of the Sea made six round-trip voyages from North Atlantic ports before being lost during ...
Yarros says she felt she needed to prove to herself she could write another book, so she went back to her roots and drafted a contemporary romance called "Variation," which published in October ...
In much simpler surroundings, the third class passengers also engage in music, dancing, winning, and whirlwind romances. Meanwhile, Beesley and Goodwin toy with the possibility of embarking on an illicit affair in an empty cabin but decide not to. Goodwin comments that shipboard romances, like shipboard friendships, are meant to end with the ...
The clinical assistant broke down during the two-part reunion special — and called out the Average Expectations author, 42, for moving on so quickly after their breakup. “We spent two and a ...
Drake had sailed his ship from England around the bottom of the Americas and up the west coast. He was, to use a phrase he coined 10 years later, “singeing the beard of the king of Spain ...