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"moorings" Definitions
  1. nautical
  2. the ropes, anchors, etc, used in mooring a vessel
  3. (sometimes singular)
  4. something that provides security or stability

174 Sentences With "moorings"

How to use moorings in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "moorings" and check conjugation/comparative form for "moorings". Mastering all the usages of "moorings" from sentence examples published by news publications.

As she lost her internal moorings, Mr. McCarthy found his outdoors.
He batters Americans' hold on reality until they yield their moorings.
"Words can pop loose from their meanings and moorings," Walsh said.
And you feel sometimes that the country is looking for its moorings.
These things look wholly unnatural, resembling paved floors, moorings, courtyards, and colonnades.
In shallower waters, moorings can be driven directly into the ocean floor.
MOORINGS DR., 1574, No. 2B-Kimberly J. Luff to Raymond Zaylah, $226,000.
" McCaffrey added that he's beginning to wonder if "the country's losing its moorings.
There are no moorings for a judicial foray into the waters of partisan gerrymandering.
"The party has become untethered from its historic moorings in limited government," Sanford said.
" The £10 reverse, meanwhile, while depict two otters and an excerpt from Norman MacCaig's "Moorings.
It has already pulled the front-runner far to the left of her natural moorings.
Many of them simply do not believe that the president has any fixed ideological moorings.
There, more than 50 sensor-equipped instruments called profiling moorings are continuously monitoring the ocean.
The court extended this murky standard beyond its moorings under one jurisdictional statute to another.
The GOP has drifted so badly from its moorings that it has become almost unrecognizable.
A Reuters witness saw the ship leaving its moorings in the naval port of Sevastopol.
The religious characters — those who thought they understood the world — no longer have their moorings.
Moorings are available only to residents, and one- to three-bedroom properties are priced from $43,000.
Others are incalculable: waterlogged photos, frayed communities, the invisible moorings of permanence and safety swept away.
In some places, guardrails are tilted off their moorings like a pair of glasses knocked askew.
Also, mobile platforms crawl up and down long moorings to take readings higher in the water column.
Neither did they want creditors impounding Hanjin's vessels in their facilities, leaving valuable moorings occupied for months.
But he lost his moorings after his ouster, and took money from former enemies and questionable sources.
Or we can cast away the moorings of law laid down to save the world from horror.
Bunches of dried herbs hang from exposed roof timbers, and large windows overlook boats bobbing at moorings.
Stonewall Jackson sternly astride his horse in the middle of a Richmond intersection — I lost my moorings.
Half an hour later, the Polarstern slipped its moorings and eased out of the harbor, headed north.
An independent inquiry into what those physicians did and how they lost their ethical moorings is vital.
When the executive branch loses its moorings, it's up to Congress to steady the ship of state.
With the Capitals pressing, Kuemper was called for delay of game for knocking the net of its moorings.
A diesel-perfumed monster, its seats appeared ready to come loose from their moorings on the metal floor.
On the shoreline in Bayonne, New Jersey, a barge washed up after apparently breaking free from its moorings.
All the properties have private beachfront access, boat moorings, Jacuzzis, and pools for guests to take advantage of.
This is a world that has slipped the moorings of realism, where the unbelievable becomes a daily occurrence.
Two barges also broke free of their moorings and hit bridges that run over the San Jacinto River.
Russia's navy is returning to the sea after a quarter-century when its ships sat rusting at their moorings.
The Spirit of Tasmania, a large Australian ferry, has broken from its moorings and smashed into a Melbourne pier.
But if the purpose of the company slips its shareholder-value moorings, who knows where it might end up?
When you put that together with everything else that I started the podcast with ... We don't have any moorings.
In that case, you have taken on unintended risk because your portfolio has drifted far from its original moorings.
A video review ruled the puck had crossed the goal line before the net was dislodged from its moorings.
AS THE UNITED KINGDOM prepares to slip its European moorings, the ties that bind it together are also under strain.
Some of the villas have been built on an island of reclaimed land with adjacent boat moorings included with purchase.
But when your world is abruptly wrenched from its moorings, even your most reliable possessions can go rogue on you.
Those still standing were often badly damaged: balconies twisted from their moorings and gaping holes in the sides of homes.
The PYD (Democratic Union Party), which looks to Ocalan for its ideological moorings, is the most dominant political force in Rojava.
The Moorings rents a 57-foot crewed catamaran yacht with six cabins in Tortola starting at $20,230 to $1803,200, yacht only.
If the surge here reaches over 7 feet, the docks will separate from their moorings and the boats will be lost.
"We still have enough moorings that I don't want to declare this market out of control," the "Mad Money" host said.
However, the net came off its moorings just before the puck crossed the line, a decision that was upheld by review.
His seat belt ripped from its moorings, and the crash injured his spinal cord — leaving him paralyzed from the chest down.
But as they travel, Barnum starts to drift from his moorings and must return to his roots to find true happiness.
Mike is a hapless patsy, but he has also been knocked off his ethical moorings by the prospect of financial ruin.
The Republican Party, which once served as home for a variety of clashing philosophies about foreign policy, has lost its moorings.
Iraq is also relying on four operational single point moorings (SPMs) for loading oil tankers, each with a capacity of 850,000 bpd.
The net was off its moorings before the puck crossed the goal line, however, and the apparent goal was immediately waved off.
A half-dozen wharves extended from the shoreline, and a fleet of lobster boats pointed into the wind, swinging from their moorings.
His candidacy separates the blue-collar social populists from their partisan moorings even as his economic populism appeals to the Sanders left.
Perhaps these French ex-Catholics, while sadly cut loose from their cultural and religious moorings, have gained access to a compensating sophistication?
The ship broke free of its moorings during a blizzard on Wednesday morning, according to a statement from the Australian Antarctic Division.
Greg McKegg's shot trickled through Rask's legs just before the forward crashed into the goal and knocked the net off its moorings.
Her thesis is simple: at some point, feminism lost its political moorings; it became vapid and toothless in its quest for universality.
The court soundly rejected novel and implausible arguments that would have wrenched the constitutional allocation of powers loose from its long-fixed moorings.
But the event has broken free of its traditional moorings in earnest now, as this week's landing in the Paris suburbs makes clear.
With fires raging on the dock, he jumped ashore and wrestled the ship free from its moorings so it could move to safety.
Nearby, Seymour's Boatyard has 21840 moorings, including 21920 transient spots available for a minimum two-hour stay, for overnight or for the season.
The house does not have its own dock, but moorings are available; the owners rent one at a nearby boatyard, Ms. Heron said.
The documents, declassified in response to an American Civil Liberties Union lawsuit, show in chilling detail how C.I.A. medicine lost its moral moorings.
But in the finished image, Mr. Chermayeff has wrenched the "U" from its moorings, leaving two jagged stumps where the letter once was.
In 2018, a 2-year-old in Nebraska died after a bounce house was torn from its moorings by wind and thrown 20 feet.
Clinton as a tool of the fossil fuel industry are just plain dishonest, and speak of a campaign that has lost its ethical moorings.
Maria, which struck Puerto Rico with 150 mph winds that knocked down trees and power lines, easily ripped many solar panels off their moorings.
The Moorings, a charter yacht company, has announced it will begin charter operations on Antigua this month with unmanned and crewed boats for rent.
Our information system has slipped its moorings, and as a result, lying and scheming and fraud has simply become too effective a life strategy.
"This rig can't be torn out of moorings, even with a 9-point tsunami," Dmitry Alekseenko, deputy director of the Lomonosov plant, told CNN.
Jaffe decided to deploy three to ideally five cylindrical moorings, which have GPS receivers and send out pings to the M-AUEs every 12 seconds.
Winds of up to 128 kph (80 mph) an hour tore off roofs, felled trees and ripped boats from their moorings overnight, according to media.
Newcomers from the North, drawn to banking jobs in Charlotte and to the high-tech Raleigh-Durham region, tugged the state from its conservative moorings.
In White Sulphur Springs, a house caught fire after it was ripped from its moorings, and it drifted like a floating torch down a creek.
In White Sulphur Springs, a house caught fire as it was ripped from its moorings, and it drifted like a floating torch down a creek.
However, play was blown dead and the initial call on the ice was no goal since Dubnyk had caused the goal to wobble on its moorings.
The M-AUEs navigate within the area formed by the floating moorings using these pings, and the scientists can watch as the waves push them around.
It was an attitude and platform to channel the anti-establishment grassroots, so there are no ideological moorings that suggest how his new administration will evolve.
OTTAWA — The Trans-Canada Highway, the largest road connecting the country's east and west, remained severed on Monday after a new bridge separated from its moorings.
Ms. Basso then spent five weeks in rehab at The Moorings, doing physical therapy twice each day, with daily visits from Ms. Willoughby, her care navigator.
The decision to allow female soldiers to wear head scarves threatens to deepen concerns that Mr. Erdogan seeks to sever the country from its secular moorings.
Hurricane Maria ripped it from its moorings at Christiansted, on St. Croix, and deposited it on a beach, leaning against the roots of an upturned tree.
Matthews got a second penalty shot in the final minutes after Los Angeles defenseman Jake Muzzin knocked the net off its moorings, but Matthews missed the net.
Greenwich Point Park in Old Greenwich is2504 acres at the end of a peninsula, offering swimming, fishing, nature trails, picnic areas, boat moorings and a snack bar.
It crashes through refineries, chemical storage facilities, wharves and production plants all along the Houston Ship Channel, cleaving pipelines from their moorings, lifting and breaking storage tanks.
For long before Brexit, my cultural moorings had been shifting in accordance with a new reality: America had stepped in to fill the void left by Britain.
The Avalanche got one back later in the period on another power play, right after they had a goal overturned because the net was off its moorings.
"Not a blade of grass was left," said Debbie Pribyl, the general manager of the Moorings, where the cottages have all been reroofed and the landscaping replanted.
We have seen this through even recent history: as would-be autocrats have torn multiple countries away from their democratic moorings, a primary target has been the judiciary.
The chaos continued early Friday, when officials got a report that nine barges broke away from their moorings on the San Jacinto River, the US Coast Guard said.
I like to remove spirituality from the traditional moorings that tie it to soul and spirit and place it in something that is slightly more broad in definition.
The rail, after being bolted to the ground, settles in at warmer conditions and is then able to heat and expand without warping out of place from its moorings.
By one estimate, a French yacht slips its moorings on average for just ten days a year, and for America's 12m recreational boats, typical annual usage is two weeks.
The puck ticked off Wood's skate and into the net a moment before he crashed into the net and jarred it off its moorings at the 7:25 mark.
Moorings at the resort are priced from $1.5 million but are owned freehold, a rare option that qualifies buyers for the island's Citizenship by Investment program allowing full residency.
Last month, Serbia deployed icebreakers to smash ice blocks that jammed parts of the Danube river and ripped through marinas and moorings, damaging dozens of boats and floating restaurants.
The idea is for snorkelers and divers to swim around and through the cavelike structures, set with the help of moorings at depths of five, 10 and 50 feet.
Lundqvist was whistled for delay of game during an odd second-period sequence in which he threw his own net off its moorings to get a stoppage in play.
The Coast Guard has said that witnesses reported early Friday that nine barges had broken away from their moorings at a shipyard along the fast-moving San Jacinto River.
It's been seven years since Hurricane Sandy decimated this barrier peninsula on the southern edge of Queens, tearing the boardwalk from its moorings and scattering debris across the peninsula.
ISLAMORADA 4053/2 mile Keys History & Discovery Center Cheeca Lodge & Spa Pierre's Morada Bay Beach Cafe Moorings Village florida Upper Matecumbe Key Atlantic Ocean Midway Cafe & Coffee Bar Pines and Palms Resort 1 By The New York Times The fictional Rayburn House inn from that series is the actual Blue Charlotte villa at the Moorings Village, where 18 rental cottages, some dating back to the mid-25s, occupy a former coconut plantation.
Video from the scene showed debris strewn about in the water: pieces of timber, uprooted trees, roofs that had blown off houses, and boats that had detached from their moorings.
The crisp morning air whips around my body as I make my way down to the end of a floating jetty at a community boat moorings in Wapping, East London.
Once the Conduct Panel announced its findings on Twitter, however, a wave of internet fervor crashed against its moorings, mostly from activist Smashers who felt its decision was too lenient.
Beginning at daylight, the Coast Guard started getting reports of boats that had broken from their moorings "from Rhode Island all the way up to Maine," Petty Officer Groll said.
This is the third time over the past 90 years that a major political party in the United States has lost its moorings on U.S. national and international security policy.
Barges carrying construction materials broke loose from their moorings near the Tappan Zee Bridge, which crosses the Hudson River, said Laura Ware, public involvement manager for Tappan Zee Constructors LLC.
Using nautical language and speaking near the seaport of ancient Rome, he encouraged residents to break free from "the moorings of fear and depression," telling them "you have experienced painful situations".
If she can no longer live safely at home, Ms. Basso can move onto the campus of The Moorings at Lewes, the affiliated continuing care retirement community a few blocks away.
Harper notes that mooring access is being reduced, citing the River Lea stretch around the Olympic Park in East London, where short-stay facilities have been converted into luxury permanent moorings.
But scrutinize them as carefully as Munch scrutinized himself, and they offer a more substantial confession: that the social moorings we cling to may not be as firm as we think.
"LOOSENED THE MOORINGS" Velutini said his real estate group plans to use proceeds of its planned share sale to buy up office space in Caracas, which he says is looking cheap.
"People seem to have left their moorings when it comes to Trump," said Michelle Sarbough, a South Carolina Cruz voter who burst into tears when asked how she felt about Trump's victory.
The vehicle was later repaired and completed several additional test flights through 2017, although it suffered another incident when it broke free of its moorings and deflated in 2017, injuring two people.
In 2012, a massive, 66-foot-(20-metre-) long dock ripped from its moorings in Japan and floated up 15 months later on a beach north of Newport, Oregon, southwest of Portland.
"It's not that there are too many boats, it's that there are not enough moorings," says Phineas Harper, deputy director of the Architecture Foundation, who has spent four years on the water.
Trower sees the ongoing insecurity for everyday boaters as part of a business model that prioritizes higher value uses of the canal, from pleasure boats to permanents moorings and burgeoning waterside developments.
Webbers Falls had a scare last week that made national news, after floodwaters broke two barges loose from their moorings and sent them careening toward a dam just upstream from Webbers Falls.
A soldier rushed to comfort the woman while her daughter broke into tears, fighting with the attendant to keep her mother's bag, a final indignity in a world stripped of its moorings.
That paid off handsomely at the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio two years ago when it displayed a red ball 15 feet in diameter that riotously broke free from its moorings.
Since then, the 80 or so trajineras at Zacapa have mostly been idle, as tourists head to rival moorings, boatmen said — even though they can still reach the canals in one direction.
The high point of Mr. Trifonov's magnificent performance of the Chopin Sonata came with the strange, brief final movement, a breathless blur of hushed runs that seem intent on avoiding harmonic moorings.
The complex of piers, artificial islands and offshore moorings on the finger of land curling into the Gulf at Ras Tanura is the biggest oil-export terminal of the world's biggest oil exporter.
" As of Sunday afternoon the couple was in The Moorings Marina in Tortola and posted to Faceboook: "As of right now we have no place to stay tonight and people here are desperate.
Reinhart made it 1-0 with 123:30 minutes left in the first period when his shot went off both the left post and McElhinney, who also knocked the net off its moorings.
The outcome of the Italian vote, which could determine the fate of Mr. Renzi's government, may also affect the stability of European financial markets and further weaken the moorings of the European Union.
During a test for a client, a rubber roof withstood pressure of almost 200 pounds per square foot before its fittings gave way and it burst out of its moorings with a loud pop.
The icebreaker -- which two years ago came to the rescue of dozens stranded on a Chinese ship -- itself got stuck Wednesday morning, when it broke from its moorings off Antarctica's Mawson station amid blizzard conditions.
She's displacing a lot of water, so if you bring her through too fast, her wake will push the K.V.K. up onto the shore and then suck boats off their moorings after you go by.
In the town of Minami-Aso, east of Mashiki, landslides tore the moorings from a 670-foot suspension bridge, causing it to plunge into a valley, and buried more than a dozen homes, NHK said.
Yet, in our nation's largest cities, our children are failing in institutions and agencies under black leadership and, in the absence of moral moorings and value-generating institutions, urban streets have become literal killing fields.
Within our own society, we are divided by many issues, but as recent events have painfully reminded us, we have a new generation of young people, the millennials, many of whom have lost their moorings.
Now, they're floating back down to each once more to bestow the celestial drift that is their new album Polyvision upon us (via Translation Loss, who will let Polyvision loose from its moorings on September 9).
If the gentlemen of Muirfield want to talk about a snail's pace, how about the fact that it took two years of consultation among themselves to decide, ultimately, not to budge from their 18th-century moorings?
Will and Phoebe seem to float through a world defined by its lack of moorings, and that is part of what lends poignancy to their desperate search for something, anything, around which they might organize their lives.
ROME (Reuters) - Pope Francis on Sunday visited a once-tranquil seaside community outside Rome that has become a power center of mafia violence and political corruption and urged residents to break away from the "moorings of fear".
The data-gathering tools they leave in place — from moorings that monitor oscillating water temperatures to radars encased in 10-foot-tall, egg-like protective shells that take images of melting ice — are vulnerable to the elements.
Basil Al Jara, 70, pleaded guilty on July 15 to conspiring to give corrupt payments in connection with the award of contracts to supply and install single point moorings and oil pipelines in southern Iraq, the SFO said.
Basil Al Jarah, 70, pleaded guilty on July 15 to conspiring to give corrupt payments in connection with the award of contracts to supply and install single point moorings and oil pipelines in southern Iraq, the SFO said.
Mediator MOSCOW — I wanted to better understand President Trump's America, a place where truth is being ripped from its moorings as he brands those tasked with lashing it back into place — journalists — as dishonest enemies of the people.
In November 2017, the craft tore free of its moorings before ripping open, with the firm saying the resulting deflation was the result of automatic safety features designed to bring it down if it broke free of its mast.
In the village of Minami-Aso, east of Mashiki, landslides tore the moorings from a 670-foot suspension bridge, causing it to plunge into a valley, and buried more than a dozen homes, NHK, the national public broadcaster, said.
His moorings are conservative, and he is governing as a center-right president who believes that we pay too much in taxes, that we're overregulated, that we have not taken terrorists seriously," Conway said on Fox News' "Fox & Friends.
His 2014 piece "Cabinet of Marine Debris" features plastic detritus gathered during an expedition to islands off the coast of Alaska—bottle-caps, old moorings, detergent bottles—but carefully curated and arranged like collectors' objects, giving them a strange beauty.
But now, as Trump has risen in the GOP primaries to become the undisputed front-runner, his relationship with some of these activists, who are skeptical about his ideological moorings and offended by his vitriolic campaign rhetoric, has gone cold.
He was showing the flight path of his neighbor's roof during Hurricane Irma: a roof that, like so many on this small and upscale Caribbean island, was ripped free of its moorings by the force of the storm in September.
Fire crews evacuated houseboats amid worries they could break the moorings as the river rose a further 40 cm overnight to reach 4.92 metres (16.14 ft), with forecasts showing the Seine's level could peak at around 5.70 metres on Saturday, Paris police said.
Click here to view original GIFIf a looming helium shortage isn't enough to dissuade you from getting balloons for your next birthday party, consider the consequences if they escape from their ribbon moorings and end up brushing against some high-voltage power lines.
You see it in America and you see it in so many places around the world: This big international political and cultural food fight we're having right now is happening because what's at stake is the very character and moorings of our societies.
With fans already trickling towards the ground over the concourses and bridges of the Olympic Park, we break away from the crowds and head down towards the moorings on the Bow Back Rivers where the Hammers Chat YouTube channel have their impromptu headquarters.
In a worst-case scenario, they say, it would instead be torn from its moorings and sent barreling inland, plowing through buildings until it landed, steaming and dented and with two active reactors on board, well away from its source of coolant.
That overlooked cultural history was evolving, he said, while in colleges as well as in the cotton fields "the besmirching of the African past" became pivotal to the process not only of enslaving blacks but of destroying their spiritual and psychological moorings.
Mr. Stewart could especially hurt Representative Barbara Comstock, a Republican defending a seat in affluent Northern Virginia that is emblematic of how the state has been shifted from its once-fixed Republican moorings by an influx of immigrants and college-educated professionals.
The moorings, which were purpose-built for AMOC studies, were deployed in 2014 as part of a $35 million, multinational project called OSNAP (short for Overturning in the Subpolar North Atlantic Program) aimed at answering fundamental questions about what's driving its strength.
"Many people have boats, as the river is so close by (moorings are available a few minutes' bike ride from the house), and it connects with the city canals or to great swimming spots outside the city," Ms. Destrée wrote in an email.
"There are always people who think that Wheaton has become this really draconian, oppressive, fundamentalist place, and there are always people who think that it's just given up on its evangelical moorings and its Christianity," said Timothy Larsen, a Wheaton professor of Christian thought.
This backlash helped Republicans win in 2010 and 2014, but it also left Mr. McConnell with an empowered right wing, led by the likes of Jim DeMint of South Carolina and Ted Cruz of Texas, that was deeply wary of this onetime moderate with weak ideological moorings.
BOSTON — Utility poles snapped, cruise ships sought shelter, boats broke from their moorings, trees were uprooted, and more than 2100,23 customers in New England were without power at times on Thursday as a storm packing winds gusting to 2000 miles an hour swept up the East Coast.
While past political figures, most memorably a young Barack Obama, found their intellectual moorings among the city's thinkers and strivers, Mr. O'Rourke's seven New York years (four at Columbia University and three after graduation) were, in his own telling, often an exercise in recognizing his own averageness.
Steffen Olsen, a climate scientist at the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI), snapped a picture of the pack of pooches as they hauled a sled of DMI researchers during an expedition to retrieve oceanographic moorings and weather station equipment at the Inglefield Bredning fjord in northwest Greenland on June 13.
You could see it on the runway, where they mixed attempts to loose the moorings of the brand and give it a bit more currency in the form of silver-splashed denim and bead-splattered white cotton with traditional Oscarisms in a series of tulle princess party gowns.
This isn't to say there's no delight to be found in these often perceptive and delicately drawn portraits — in particular those of Esther, whose "moorings have been cut free," and Javad, haunted by the "nostalgia of an exile he's condemned to bear" — but their interactions are decidedly less convincing.
Disappointingly for lovers of Darwin's vision of land animals moving from place to place on natural rafts, an intensive examination of 634 objects, ranging from a plastic bottle to a floating dock 20 metres long that had been ripped free of its moorings (see picture) failed to reveal any terrestrial species.
The sisters Soloway had a bit of early fame when their 1990 cult creation, "The Real Live Brady Bunch" — verbatim re-enactments of the show starring a yet unknown Jane Lynch — which started at the alternative and anarchic Annoyance Theater in Chicago, jumped its moorings and opened in New York and Los Angeles.
It is, by definition, the mongrel sport, the mutt, the embodiment of what magic can be made when artistic and athletic traditions are stripped of their historical and cultural moorings and then mashed together and mixed up and twisted and contorted and shaped into something new and original and greater: into something American.
Moving aside from Brexit for a couple of hundred words, I just want to point out there are one or two other incy-wincy issues that may also screw things up, especially for financial markets, in addition to whether Britain slips its moorings and drifts away from Europe to somewhere lost in the mid-Atlantic.
"He could come up with this $50 billion, he could walk across my pond and not get wet, and I'm still not going to vote for him because, you know, at the end of the day my name is Chris Gibbs, it's not Judas, and I'm not going to sell my political moorings for 30 pieces of silver," Gibbs said.
In February of this year, I issued a report that provided a small sampling of the most egregious examples of Pentagon waste that have occurred in the past few years, from small expenses like Pentagon personnel spending on casinos and strip clubs using their government-issued credit cards to spending $28503 billion on a surveillance balloon that failed spectacularly when it came free from its moorings and crashed in Pennsylvania.

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