dock, port, harbour, jetty, wharf, quay...
load factor
gold,silver Clipper ships were most noted for the carrying of tea from China and India to England. These fast ships raced to get the first load of tea and the premium price it would bring as the last dregs of the previous season was getting old.
The load is the amount of sales charge that is deducted from the amount you are investing. So if a fund has a 5% load, vs a 2% load - the amount actually being invested and available to earn dividends, etc. in the future could be reduced.
Collateral, well for me it is what could place an equal but opposite return to to what i am giving as load. What if your organ could be taken as collateral? Just have the loan before borrowing.
The best way to carry the load is backwards and with the forks up. When you put the forks up, you will shift the weight of the load towards the middle.
It is called a port
A permanent structure for ships to load and unload cargo and passengers.
Quay, pronounced like "key." It is a place like a warf or structured bank alongside which a ship can moor to load or off load cargo.
The quay, which is pronounced like "key" is, can be defined as a place like a warf or structured bank alongside which a ship can moor to load or off load cargo. A link is provided below.
A port.
A navy is a group of ships that use a pier as a place to dock, load, or unload.
port
Plural of wharf. Wharf = A landing place or pier where ships may tie up and load or unload.
In Britain, people who load and unload ships are known as stevedores, dockworkers or dockers.
Stevedores usually load or unload cargo on ships.
An alongshoreman is another word for a longshoreman, a man employed to load and unload ships.
That is a wharf or a dock.