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Mail boat   /meɪl boʊt/   Listen
Mail boat

noun
1.
A boat for carrying mail.  Synonyms: mailboat, packet, packet boat.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Mail boat" Quotes from Famous Books



... ever came to disturb its quietude. Every morning Uncle Terry, often accompanied by Telly in a calico dress and sunbonnet, rowed out to pull his lobster traps, and after dinner harnessed and drove to the head of the island to meet the mail boat, then at eventide, after lighting his pipe and the lighthouse lamp at about the same time, generally strolled over to Bascom's to have a chat, while Telly made a call on the "Widder Leach," a misanthropic but pious protegee of hers, ...
— Uncle Terry - A Story of the Maine Coast • Charles Clark Munn

... want to be bothered with him just yet. I have no place to put him into. The Californian mail boat from San Francisco is not due here for another ten days. But I know that he hasn't taken his stolen money ashore yet, and you had better hand it over to me at once. I can get ...
— By Rock and Pool on an Austral Shore, and Other Stories • Louis Becke

... about that," Dunster remarked. "If the mail boat doesn't run, I presume there will be ...
— The Vanished Messenger • E. Phillips Oppenheim

... also should be at Paris on the 13th February, 1832. Should General Simon find a vessel ready to sail for Europe, he was to return immediately, to fetch Djalma; and the latter, expecting him daily, was now going to the pier of Batavia, hoping to see the father of Rose and Blanche arrive by the mail boat ...
— The Wandering Jew, Complete • Eugene Sue

... sailed in sealing schooners. Their comrades sold him furs, and filled part of the hold up with redwood billets and bark for the stove, for he had not considered it advisable to load too much Wellington coal. Then he pushed out into the waste Pacific, and when once a beautiful big white mail boat reeled by him, driving with streaming bows into an easterly gale, he sent back a message to his friends upon the prairie. It duly reached them, for some three weeks afterwards Allen Hastings, opening The Colonist, which he had ordered from Victoria as soon as Wyllard sailed, read out to ...
— Hawtrey's Deputy • Harold Bindloss


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