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Yes. Most of them are cruise ships.
Both ships were large passenger liners, both sank in the 1910s, and both sinkings resulted in large losses of life.
Alan L. Cary has written: 'Famous liners and their stories' -- subject(s): Ocean liners, Passenger ships, Registers, Steamboats
The reason is really unknown, although people call large passenger liners both 'ships'and 'she' and they call liners with only crew 'boats' and 'he'. Boats are always "she" It's just the way of life. Also, they're calling us women fat.
In most ships this is called the galley, although on big passenger liners it would be called the kitchens, and there'd be more than one of them.
they are all ships tankers are shooters i think and stemers are ships run on steam and liners are big long ships
The Ocean Steamship Company owned many types of ships. Some of them were iron ships, wood schooners, iron steamers, wood brigantines, passenger liners and a wood?æbarquentine.?æ?æ
There are many ocean liners in operation. Google "cruise ships."
Ladder: On shipboard, all stairs are called "ladders," except for literal staircases aboard passenger liners. Most "stairs" on a ship are narrow and nearly vertical, hence the name. From the Anglo-Saxon hiaeder, meaning ladder.
Ladder: On shipboard, all stairs are called "ladders," except for literal staircases aboard passenger liners. Most "stairs" on a ship are narrow and nearly vertical, hence the name. From the Anglo-Saxon hiaeder, meaning ladder.[Source: http://www.desertanchor.com/glossary.htm]
a Fleet
It is called an "Armada"...