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A safe harbour.
In shipping it is a place where ships are docked loaded and repaired. A harbor can also describe a place of safety in many other situations. Or it is a body of water along the shore that is deep enough to anchor a ship and also protects land and places along the shoreline from heavy winds and waters,
This expression comes from exploration by sea: when explorers came to a place by ship, they would drop the anchor (or just "drop anchor") to hold their ship in place, close to shore, allowing the sailors to get off the ship without it floating away. When the explorer's ship got close enough to the island, he dropped anchor and told his men they could go ashore.
No. They tie off to fleets and shore lines.
the lighthouse of Alexandria was made to direct ships away from the shore or to the shore
Well, obviously shore. But also horse.
Words that can be made from the letters in 'horse' include the anagrams shore and hoers, and shorter words such as:heher, hersherohoe, hoeshoseororeroerosesheshoesosore
Yes. Many ships are on shore now and crashed into other ships on the coast of Japan.
Now days all ships have GPS. They also use a compass and radar.
shore
They warn ships that they are approaching the shore.
Usually, unless the boat is riding at anchor.