Moor
I went boating on the moor yesterday. I like to walk my dog on the moor near my house. The sheep graze peacefully on the moor.
moor
Religare = to tie out of the way, to bind fast, to moor (as a ship)
HMS Forest Moor was not a real naval vessel. It might have been mistakenly referenced in literature, but it does not have a historical existence as a Royal Navy ship.
Ropes and springs. Springs are usually wire hawsers which face inwards and the lines which usually ropes extend away from the ship.
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.
The noun 'wharf' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a flat area to moor and unload a ship; a thing.
The Robin Moor was a US ship sunk in neutral waters by a German submarine several months before the United States was in the Second World War. The sinking was an illegal act and caused increased tension between the United States and Germany.
A moor is an open area of land.
Berth as a noun means bunk or anchorage, i.e. a ship's allotted place at a wharf or dock. Berth as a verb means to moor or anchor.
The homophone for "more" is "moor."