Occupation of loading and unloading ships.
Sinónimos
Examples for "docker"
Examples for "docker"
1The government men were hauling a sodden docker from the polluted waters.
2The docker stared at him-washe going to sleep on his feet?
3Deer Janis, you got me the muney for the docker.
4In full work a docker at the old 7d.
5The man who had occupied this hole, one Dan Cullen, docker, was dying in hospital.
1He was built like a greyhound with the shoulders of a stevedore.
2For twenty years he had fought nothing bigger than a drunken stevedore.
3I had it from the stevedore, who has been loading their cargo.
4One third of the American stevedore force in Europe was Negro.
5Well, if this ain't fortunate. The stevedore's services were required for Mammy Easter.
1He got beaten every day, in fact, just like every other longshoreman.
2This was followed by a moment of silence, then a longshoreman's bellow.
3The pilot, the fisherman and the longshoreman were notorious offenders in this respect.
4For every housewife and every longshoreman and every Hindu nationalist and every teacher.
5Jane's language would have made Britney the longshoreman blush down to her boots.
1He heard the dockworker gasp and felt him clutch at his arm.
2Perhaps he'd been a dockworker in Miiska before the warehouse burned down.
3The suspect was named Mateo Judd, a dockworker with an unspectacular criminal record.
4A dockworker might reasonably show up to an impromptu meeting sweaty and disheveled.
5He knew he had been the target, not that dockworker.
1By the end of the week he was a transient lumper on a river steamboat.
2The best work, when he could get it, was being a lumper down on the wharves.
3Of course, it must be remembered that along with such frivolous occupations I was trying to get work as wop, lumper, and roustabout.
4Let an Englishman exchange his bread and beer, and beef, and mutton, for no breakfast, for a lukewarm lumper at dinner, and no supper.
5It depends on where you decide to make your divisions-whetheryou are a "lumper" or a "splitter," as they say in the biological world.
1At Ferry Post he was changed into a wharf labourer.
1He is a waterside labourer; last job at that was a fortnight since.
2For the three years before her death she had been living in Fashion Street with a waterside labourer named Michael Kidney.
1Sometimes he is a gold-digger, sometimes a dock laborer, sometimes a soldier, sometimes a sailor, but whatever he is he wears patent-leather boots.
2News comes from Hamburg that the strike of the dock laborers is over.
3Here were dock laborers, seamen and riverside loafers, lascars, Chinese, Arabs, negroes and dagoes.
4The two men were rough looking fellows and reminded Dave of dock laborers or loiterers.
5The porters who carry your baggage from the landing stage to the steamer do more work than three English dock laborers.
1How would you know what a wharf rat looks like?
2I told you, I wasn't wearing my spectacles and he looked just like a wharf rat runnin' through the kitchen.
3He couldn't tell the world that Mr. Wharf Rat was a thief.
4Sometimes these wharf rats are captured in the act, when fierce fights ensue.
5The Hannah was a river boat and not a dive for wharf rats.
1The Ports of Auckland has admitted it leaked personal leave details of a striking waterside worker to a blogger.
2Emil stood by the harbor shed, with some waterside workers, looking on.
3New Zealand Waterside Workers' Union Waterfront Lockout 51 loyalty card.
4Foreign trade shrunk away to nothing; the stevedores and waterside workers might as well stop at home.
5Eventually, the waterside workers voted to go back to work, but about 2000, including Andersen, were blacklisted from the waterfront forever.