dockland - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • base: Docklands based young photographer Mark Okoh is a man on the up.
  • redevelop: A dozen years ago there was a scheme to beautify and redevelop the docklands of Newport by the creation of a freshwater lake.

Adjective modifier

  • former: Me And My Desire The decline of London as a port led to vast areas of former dockland in the East End becoming derelict.
  • s: Manchester ' s Castlefield and Liverpool ' s Docklands are both potential gray zones - their age profiles are already rising.
  • East: The six-inch pipes are one inch thick " The system covers an area from Kensington in the west to the East End docklands.
  • redundant: The 130-acre site was, until recently, mostly redundant dockland.

Modifies a noun

  • area: On leaving school in 1935 Francis took a job in an office in London's thriving dockland area.
  • redevelopment: Docklands redevelopment proposals for East London: R. Travers Morgan, 1973.
  • community: A docklands community at the end of its life In James Street someone has torched a Ford.
  • site: Gateshead recently saw the last of its major vacant plots brought forward for development, while Glasgow's docklands site is filling up fast.
  • railroad: With the coming on the dockland railroad at the end of next year traffic volume at the airport is expected to increase substantially.
  • development: CANARY WHARF London's controversial docklands office development, Canary Wharf, is to go public in the next few months.

Noun used with modifier

  • round: Join us for a wander round Docklands on the Locks & Docks ride.
  • london: Our current range of solutions include: Hosting - all based on UNIX servers at london docklands.
  • end: The six-inch pipes are one inch thick " The system covers an area from Kensington in the west to the East End docklands.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.