英:['dɒkhænd]
美:['dɒkˌhænd]
英:['dɒkhænd]
美:['dɒkˌhænd]
dock·hand
dak haend
词根:docker
n.docker 码头工人
dockworker 码头工人
The first known use of dockhand was in 1920
1 A number of fashionably dressed young men, as well as the usual dockhands and porters, were crowding about to welcome her.
2 In turn, stevedores and dockhands and clerks furnished him with information and he scooped up the rascals on the threshold of deliverance.
3 He was a rambler out of South Carolina and found his way to slave catching after a hardscrabble sequence: dockhand, collection agent, gravedigger.
4 We asked a dockhand where the jail was, and he told us straight up Union.
5 “He looked like a cross between a dockhand and a pirate,” she wrote in The Plain Dealer in 1975, reviewing a young musician.
6 He was just “a sick old man” who talked like a dockhand and indulged in hyperbole.
7 He dropped out of college and drifted to New York, where he worked as a dockhand, dance-hall bouncer, bodyguard and dish washer before returning to Florida in 1957 and enrolling in acting classes.
8 Mrs. Bentley became widely respected for her extensive sourcing, which reached from the ranks of dockhands to the higher echelons of Maryland’s political establishment.
9 As a child he worked as a dockhand and shoeshine boy before training as a metal worker.
10 And who could have imagined that Dr. Louen, son of a dockhand, would one day become the world's foremost authority on the practical applications of torture?
11 Fawzi turned to his wife and daughter, interrupting himself to shout instructions to a couple of dockhands who were floating the baggage off the ship on a contragravity-lifter.
12 She saw him pause, evidently to make inquiry of a dockhand.
13 a trade embargo that was especially hard on the nation's dockhands
14 Two of the eight tainted Tylenol bottles came from Jewel stores in the northwest suburbs, though neither had passed through the Melrose Park warehouse where Arnold had long worked for Jewel as a dockhand.
15 Alhonna is the genesis of the crime drama, where screenwriter Bill Dubuque worked as a dockhand in his youth at the comfortable, somewhat dated, lake retreat.
16 Just stepping onto the log from the dock, then maintaining balance as the log was pushed out into the water by dockhands with poles, looked like a challenge.