A strong vertical post of timber or iron, fixed on the deck of a ship, to which the ship's mooring lines etc. are secured.
A post on a ship or quay used principally for mooring boats.
1 One of the polemen jumped ashore, securing a line to a bollard .
2 But the next driver affected by the bollard issue was Aussie Daniel Ricciardo.
3 There was a small group ahead of him, leaning on a concrete bollard .
4 He was propped against a bollard and he was in his shore-going clothes.
5 He came out and threw a line over a bollard on the jetty.
6 The injured man sat on a bollard and lit a cigarette.
7 Lawrence, standing on a bollard , with B. H. Liddell Hart.
8 He clung to the bollard , close beside the coxswain.
9 Manfred leans against a black-painted cast-iron bollard next to a cycle rack: he feels dizzy.
10 It hit a bollard , he told the Press Association.
11 Then, sheltering behind a bollard , he lighted his pipe.
12 Allday was sitting on a bollard by the waterfront, his hat tilted over his eyes.
13 An eyewitness to the crash said he saw the car 'driving at speed' into a bollard .
14 He nearly swamped the launch, and the friction of the bollard threatened to set it ablaze.
15 The 'Westminster bollard ' is a ribbed one-metre tall manganese steel pillar, with a tapering rectangular shape.
16 The 'Westminster bollard ' is a ribbed one-meter tall manganese steel pillar, with a tapering rectangular shape.
Other examples for "bollard"
Grammar, pronunciation and more