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iron-sick
or 颈路谤辞苍路蝉颈肠办
[ ahy-ern-sik ]
adjective
Nautical.
- noting a wooden hull, fastened with iron, in which chemical interaction between the iron and the wood has resulted in the decay of both; nail-sick.
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Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- i顎價on sick顎卬ess noun
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of iron-sick1
First recorded in 1620鈥30
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
That old ship of the faith was leaky and iron-sick, and down by the head and heel, as they say at sea.
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Hawke describes the Portland, a ship of which he was in command, as "iron-sick"; the wood was too rotten, that is, to hold the iron bolts, so that "not a man in the ship had a dry place to sleep in."
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