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ship
Depends on several factors....the port of origin, how fast the ship moves, and the port of destination. Assuming the ship leaves from Miami, and travels to Santiago, at 20 knots (average cruise ship speed) it will take 31 hours to transit the 632 nautical miles between those two ports. About 1.3 days....
In transit means that something is "on the road" or "in the air" or otherwise in the process of moving from one place to another. It has left its origin but not yet arrived at its destination - it is "in transit."
32.20m
I have checked "The Traffic Dictionary". A handbook of domestic and foreign trade and transportation terms, phrases and abbreviations, by George T. Stufflebeam, fourth edition, copyright , 1950, Simmons-Boardman Publishing, Corp. New York. This term is not listed and the closest abbreviation is S.I.T. for stopping in transit OR storage in transit.
Your answer depends on your point of departure, your ultimate destination and the transit time of the ship you choose.
The general manager of the Cuyahoga Transit Company who owned the ship.
Depends on the type of ship, country of origin of the ship, and who's rowing!
Latin for "Thus passes the glory of the world."
13 Hours
Normally used in transport contracts, where the ship decelerates from transit speed.