Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Ship's load ", 7 letters:
freight

Alternative clues for the word freight

Word definitions for freight in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Freight \Freight\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Freighted ; p. pr. & vb. n. Freighting .] [Cf. F. freter.] To load with goods, as a ship, or vehicle of any kind, for transporting them from one place to another; to furnish with freight; as, to freight a ship; to ...

Usage examples of freight.

The big Mogul and the freight were still held, and now it was much after seven, and Argenta all astir.

Combined with what Lester did to Zanzibar, the Manties have to be feeling as if they strayed in front of an out-of-control freight shuttle at the bottom of a gravity well.

Paganel asked John Mangles whether the raft could not follow the coast as far as Auckland, instead of landing its freight on the coast.

The men who worked at the Weissensee cemetery continued to go to work even when there was German field artillery in nearby Berliner Allee firing at targets in the open ground at Wartenberg, to the north of the freight railway lines.

Sliding down hill on a bobsleigh, he invariably tooted and whistled like an engine, and trudging uphill he puffed and imitated a heavy freight climbing up grade.

Harry could see the green work engine nose to nose with the freight car, its engineer and brakeman with their backs to them, working at the couplings.

A great number have been sightings of transients and freight riders and animals, even tree branches scratching at the window, not hadals.

East pay seven dollars a pair for canvasbacks and even pick up the cold freight charge.

It was a grand canoe trip--a weird procession of tawny, black-haired fellows swinging their paddles day after day, with their freight of ancient bones, leaving the sunny fishing grounds of the Nanticoke and the Choptank to seek a refuge from the detested white man in the cold mountains of Pennsylvania.

The fleet was eventually folded into two independent transportation companies that allowed the HBC preferential freight rates with no need for further capital expenditures.

Since all the usual weight limits had been waived in his favor, his comps, books, and even his antique drafting board had all been freighted from Earth.

Bottom like a freight druv by the Devil himself, or at least his next hottest hollerer.

Lake Fret revert to prairie, thereby costing the company a fortune for a new air or dryland freighting system.

Corpulent ducts belched and vomited their gaseous freight into enormous chuckling compressors.

The fact is, the freighting business had grown to such important proportions that there was nearly as much excitement over suddenly acquired toll-road fortunes as over the wonderful silver mines.