51Թ

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fishing banks

plural noun

  1. a relatively shallow area of the sea in which fish are usually abundant.


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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of fishing banks1

First recorded in 1755–65
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

As recently as 1947, 31 per cent of Grimsby vessels either had no lavatories or unusable ones … And working hours once the fishing banks have been reached are extremely long — 18 hours a day is commonplace.

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There they would catch double their quota but mark the prawns down in the electronic log as coming from two different fishing banks.

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The Yahgan squaws did not know the joys of taking four-pound trout with a seven-ounce rod, but they had just as much fun as do the New Yorkers who go out to the fishing banks every summer day, and they caught more fish, too.

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"Having lines," he says, "we proceeded to the fishing banks without the harbor, and fished for cod, but it not being a proper time of tide, we caught but two."

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That it is essential to the welfare of all these United States, that the inhabitants thereof, at the expiration of the war, should continue to enjoy the free and undisturbed exercise of their common right to fish on the Banks of Newfoundland, and the other fishing banks and seas of North America, preserving inviolate the treaties between France and the said States, &c. &c. 3dly.

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