seaborne in English

adjective
1
transported or traveling by sea.
seaborne trade

Use "seaborne" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "seaborne" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "seaborne", or refer to the context using the word "seaborne" in the English Dictionary.

1. The city prospered, thanks to seaborne and overland commerce.

2. The Barbary States of North Africa had plundered seaborne commerce for centuries

3. The ship docks at Rifleman Bank Station, a seaborne regional Belltower supply hub.

4. Catering to the Roman taste for luxury, the flourishing seaborne trade supplied all kinds of merchandise.

5. The Canal handles something like 10% of seaborne trade, spanning everything from finished goods to oil, gas, and dry-bulk commodities

6. Chittagong, which handles nearly 90 percent of Bangladesh’s seaborne trade, handled nearly 3 million TEU in 2017, compared with its designed annual capacity of 1.7 million TEU

7. Capesizes are normally used for iron ore and coal, Cargoes that will represent about 2.7 billion tons of seaborne trade this year -- by far the biggest source of demand for non-oil commodity

8. Capesizes are normally used for iron ore and coal, Cargoes that will represent about 2.7 billion tons of seaborne trade this year — by far the biggest source of demand for non-oil commodity

9. Babur (Urdu: بابر; named after the first Mughal Emperor Zahir-ud-Din Babur [citation needed]), also designated Hatf-VII, Translit: Target, is a short-range turbojet powered subsonic cruise missile that can be launched from land or underwater seaborne platforms

10. Owing to the substantial superiority of the Royal Navy's surface forces, Germany's Imperial Navy (in World War I) and Kriegsmarine (in World War II) had little hope of seizing control of the high seas, but with submarines the Germans could hope to defeat the British by choking off their crucial access to seaborne commerce.

11. Anzio (Italian: Lo sbarco di Anzio), also known as The Battle for Anzio (UK title), is a 1968 Technicolor war film in Panavision, an Italian and American co-production, about Operation Shingle, the 1944 Allied seaborne assault on the Italian port of Anzio in World War II.It was adapted from the book Anzio by Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, who had been the BBC war correspondent at the battle.