Advertisement
Advertisement
quay
1[ kee, key, kwey ]
Quay
2[ kwey ]
noun
- Matthew Stanley, 1833–1904, U.S. politician: senator 1887–99, 1901–4.
quay
/ kiː /
Other Words From
- quaylike adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of quay1
Example Sentences
There, right on the quay on lot 36, were ship’s Captain Joseph Lazou and Marie Louise Balivet, passenger number 178.
As Chan’s co-presenter, Quay, put it in his presentation, which covered similar ground, no “innocent” virologist would commit such oversights.
Steve Garth, who works in Circular Quay, was inside the Cartier jewelry store near the café when the siege began.
The Mob ran wild, using the local Teamsters to run casinos in Las Vegas and bombing buildings along the River Quay.
On my last day but one I crossed to the Giudecca and ran into him on the quay.
In 1634 he also prohibited the landing of tobacco any where except at the quay near the custom house in London.
It also authorised the construction and maintenance, as p. 150part of such railways, of any pier, quay or jetty.
When Skipper Worse reached the market quay he met with a sad disappointment.
In 1821 and the years following, one of them ran a little shop on the quay des Grands-Augustins, and purchased Lousteau's books.
The destroyers were still coaling, and a small cargo was being taken off the boat at the quay.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse