A stop for a ship is called a port of call. A cruise ship might be said to make a stopover (or port call) at a port of call.
http://sailwx.info/shiptrack click on the cruise ship link -- if you know the cruise ship's call letters (google it) you can call up that ship specifically -- for example, this is for the Carnival Liberty http://www.sailwx.info/shiptrack/shipposition.phtml?call=HPYE
''Cruise Visitors'' are a term that tourism boards and merchants in a cruise ship's port of call use to refer to passengers visiting their area by cruise ship.
The only way to call a cruise ship is to go through the communication provider on board.
A cruise port or port of call is simply where a cruise ship stops. The Embarkation Port is where the cruise starts. The Disembarkation Port is where the cruise ends. Often those are the same. The Ports of Call are the stops the ship makes for passengers to get off and take shore excursions.
it depends in the phone company
They make them square.
A cruise ship passenger is someone who is on a cruise ship during a cruise.
A cruise ship tourist is a person who tours you around a cruise ship.
It is a cruise liner or cruise ship.
Yes, you can.
A cruise ship passenger.
A cruise ship passenger.