The ships did not move when Gulliver pulled them in Lilliput because they were tied down by thousands of tiny threads from the Lilliputians. The combined force of the threads made it impossible for Gulliver to move the ships.
Many ships can move in any direction including backwards
Originally, coal was hauled by horse and wagon, barges, and ships. The first railroads were used to move coal- on rail cars pulled by horses. Later, locomotives pulled the trains. Some factories were built near the coal mines to shorten the trip.
some ships move by wind or a flag.
Ships help to move products across the world oceans.
Locks help ships move from one level to another
Olden day ships move by the wind, the wind pushes the sail and it goes to the direction the wind is going.
Yes
If you are talking about the Gulliver's Travelsadvertisement on Poptropica, then the best advice I can give is to move to the left of screen when you don't see Gulliver's shoe, then when you do see it wait one or two seconds and start moving to the right. Then when he stomps down, you will be in front of his foot. Then after that do the same thing over again.
In those days ships and riverboats and barges were very popular where possible and when it had to go overland horses or oxen pulled wagons with the goods.
Ships and boats move large quantities and large products at a low cost. Ships are relatively slow and must be used in combination with trucks or railroads to move goods to shipping centers.
Cargo ships move about 95% of all goods around the world
How quickly is energy pulled from a source measured in volts