Mooring in a sentence as a noun

I hear it's all about finding a mooring space.

If you give up the mooring, you're boat is instantly worth 40k less.

Cheap until to see the mooring fees, and various add ons, in London.

As far as I understand, mooring is free, but you're not supposed to stay more than a few days.

For example, the task of picking up a mooring ball with the boat bouncing seemed easier.

I only pay €100 for my yacht per year, including boats house in winter and mooring in summer.

You can buy boats that already have moorings, otherwise you have to get on a 5-year waiting list.

The mooring is generally rented by a marina or yacht club.

A mooring is a permanently installed anchor with a chain attached to it and a buoy on the surface.

Clearly the only way to make this work in the movie, where the entire room was flooded, would have been to rip the toilet off of its mooring bolts.

Also, with his weighting scheme, they could be really cheap to deploy, especially for offshore wind, where they already have the mooring rights.

Actual boat-on-its-own was valued around £50,000 which means you're paying an extra £40,000 for the mooring and then have to keep paying £600 a month to keep the mooring.

I also live on a boat, in France, and the pressure on mooring places is unbearable in many places, including all of those conveniently close to "good" jobs.

Your offer sounds nice, but rentals are 5 times as expensive in Munich, then in Bremen, and I better do not talk about prices for mooring a yacht in southern Germany.

Numerous people have tried to avoid the expense of a permanent mooring by declaring themselves to be "continuously cruising" but actually staying in the same place.

Things like septic systems, building a dock or anything near the shoreline, and even putting in a mooring buoy can be significant challenges to get approved in many US jurisdictions.

The turbines’ nearly 10,000-ton cylindrical bases are held in place with three taut mooring cables attached to anchors, which lie on the sea floor.> Currently the electricity they generate is often almost twice as expensive as near-shore wind turbines and three times that of land-based wind turbines.

The problem arises when the arguments loose that utilitarian mooring and end up arguing that American policy should be concerned with lifting up Indians and Chinese in a way that doesn't necessarily maximize the prosperity of those Americans who are already here.

Mooring definitions

noun

a place where a craft can be made fast

See also: moorage berth slip

noun

(nautical) a line that holds an object (especially a boat) in place