dock
11Dock — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Dock en los sistemas operativos de Apple Macintosh (versiones desde Mac OS X 10.0 en adelante) es la barra de accesos directos, muy similar a la usada en el entorno KDE. Se divide en dos zonas: Donde se colocan las… …
12Dock — (engl.; hierzu Tafel »Docks«), eine Anlage, in der Schiffe völlig trocken gestellt werden, um Untersuchungen oder Ausbesserungen an den Unterwasserteilen auszuführen oder bei eisernen Schiffen den Bodenanstrich, bei hölzernen die Kupferung zu… …
13dock — dock1 [däk] n. [orig., mud channel made by a vessel s bottom at low tide: hence, dock < MDu docke, channel < It doccia, conduit, canal: see DOUCHE] 1. a large structure or excavated basin for receiving ships, equipped with gates to keep… …
14Dock — (d[o^]k), n. [AS. docce; of uncertain origin; cf. G. docken bl[ a]tter, Gael. dogha burdock, OF. doque; perh. akin to L. daucus, daucum, Gr. ?, ?, a kind of parsnip or carrot, used in medicine. Cf. {Burdock}.] (Bot.) A genus of plants ({Rumex}),… …
15Dock — Dock, v. t. To draw, law, or place (a ship) in a dock, for repairing, cleaning the bottom, etc. [1913 Webster] …
16dock|er — dock|er1 «DOK uhr», noun. 1. a person who works on a dock; dockworker; longshoreman: »11,000 dockers were able to work on vessels completing loading and unloading (London Times). 2. a person who lives near docks. ╂[< dock1 + er2] do …
17Dock — Dock, n. [Cf. Icel. dockr a short tail, Fries. dok a little bundle or bunch, G. docke bundle, skein, a short and thick column.] 1. The solid part of an animal s tail, as distinguished from the hair; the stump of a tail; the part of a tail left… …
18dock — däk n any plant of the genus Rumex dock vi to combine with a molecular receptor <the AIDS virus docked at the T cell receptor> * * * (dok) to perform a caudectomy on an animal …
19Dock — das; s, s <aus gleichbed. niederl. dok od. engl. dock, weitere Herkunft unbekannt> Anlage zum Ausbessern von Schiffen …
20dock — in BrE is an artificially enclosed body of water for the loading, unloading, and repair of ships; in the plural it means ‘a dockyard’. In AmE, however, a dock is a ship s berth or wharf …