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Passengers and crew (fully loaded):3547Staterooms (840 total):First Class: 416Second Class: 162Third Class: 262Plus 40 open berthing areas
. It means the ship is leaning on the side
It mean that everbody has to leave the ship.
Could mean, United States Ship (USS). Example of use; USS Saratoga (a US Navy Ship).
USS Samuel B Roberts (FFG-58)
Berthing of a ship it is when the ship come alongside another ship or alongside a quay. Unberthing is the opposite
Berthing the ship - is simply the action of tying up the ship to a dock, or pier.
Berthing time is the time when a ship will be moored at the dock. The space for the boat at the dock is called the berth.
While I was on a ship in the US Marine Corps, we called it the berthing compartments.
Fast time
A berth is a fixed bunk for sleeping in, room for manoeuvring or safety, or a space for a ship to moor or a vehicle to park.
Call a Marina, rules are many and various
A ship can be 'on' a berth, which means is is moored (tied up) alongside a specific place called a berth in the dock. Or a berth is also used to describe a place for a crew member on board ship.
It will depend on where the Marine is stationed. Typically they will be in a barracks on a Marine base. They may be in a berthing compartment onboard a ship. In some locations they may have to find their own housing.
Anything unecessary to the operation of the ship.
Its called the crew's berthing. The kitchen is the galley where they cook, the scullery where the do the dishes and the mess where the crew eats. The officers quarters are called staterooms. Officers eat in the Ward room.
Passengers and crew (fully loaded):3547Staterooms (840 total):First Class: 416Second Class: 162Third Class: 262Plus 40 open berthing areas