That would be a stevedore, I believe. Or a Longshoreman.
a dock man or a longshoreman
Another name for a dismantled ship is a HULK
Yes, the noun ship is a common noun, a general word for any ship of any kind.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:"Professor Katsman", a Russian cargo ship built 2008Ship Bottom, NJ 08008Royal Mail Ship (RMS) Titanic"Ship of Fools" 1965 movie with Vivien Leigh and Simone Signoret
covnent
Although there are variations between different style guides, they generally agree that ship names should be italicized, but not the prefix (for example, "USS Enterprise").
The term you are looking for is stowaway.
A stevedore loads and unloads ships. In other places they are just called dockers.
Such a person is known as a stevedore.
a port is the place where a ship unloads and loads goods.
stevedore
Noah
That's the Captain.
loads
The highest ranking officer on a cruise ship is called the "Ship Captain" or "Master of the Vessel." He is the only person on a ship who wears 5 stripes.
The Flying Dutchman was a ship, not a person.
Argo. The ship was named after him, the Argo. And the argonauts got their name travelling on that ship. Argo was also an argonaut.
The highest ranking officer on a cruise ship is called the "Ship Captain" or "Master of the Vessel." He is the only person on a ship who wears 5 stripes.
Mr Bruce Ismay designed it