steerage in English

noun
1
the part of a ship providing accommodations for passengers with the cheapest tickets.
poor emigrants in steerage
2
the action of steering a boat.

Use "steerage" in a sentence

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

1. It's all steerage.

2. Anthogenous The steerage of the stethoscope

3. The ship went with easy steerage.

4. Passengers traveling in the steerage paid the lowest fares.

5. Tell us of the accommodations in steerage, Mr. Dawson.

6. But the captain has informed me that there is a case of smallpox in the steerage.

7. They go steerage on the ship, but it was only three days after all.

8. Tony had a danger inside him; other men saw it and gave him steerage.

9. He was re - elected for his miraculous steerage of the country through an economic disaster.

10. I discharged one night cue to just buy the ticket of a piece of steerage.

11. With just enough power to give Joanna steerage way I felt my way slowly upstream.

12. He is re - elected for his miraculous steerage of the country through an economic disaster.

13. They would have to steerage on the ship, but it was only three days after all.

14. The colours on the sea grew flat, flatly reflected flesh secretly seen at night down in the steerage.

15. It would not be safe to have you going to and fro between the steerage and our quarters.

16. In June 1932, Father completed his assignment in the Caribbean and, traveling steerage as usual, he returned to Canada.

17. Yvonne Flatman had been designated the role of temporary helmsman and declared, cheerfully, that she had virtually no steerage way.

18. The impoverished crossed in steerage for fifty dollars; the prosperous strolled first-class decks and drank champagne at captains' tables.

19. We flew to our destination for a few hours in a modern jet airliner rather than sailing for weeks, even months, in the steerage of a ship.