shipping lane

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

shipping lane (plural shipping lanes)

  1. A route across an ocean, sea, or other body of water which is regularly used by commercial maritime vessels.
    • 1931 June 8, “Science: No Icebergs”, in Time:
      Something has happened to North Atlantic icebergs this season. Up to last week only two small "growlers" had floated into the shipping lanes.
    • 1987 July 30, Bernard E. Trainor, “Showdown in Gulf”, in New York Times, retrieved 18 February 2013:
      Ships line up on the buoys to insure they do not stray from the shipping lane.
    • 2008 December 17, David Clarke, “Chinese ship rescued from pirates in Gulf of Aden”, in Reuters, retrieved 18 February 2013:
      A multilateral force rescued a Chinese ship from Somali pirates on Wednesday, in a sign foreign navies patrolling the shipping lane linking Europe to Asia are adopting tougher new tactics.

References[edit]