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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "navigation" in a sentence

    navigation example sentences

    navigation


    1. There are no navigation satellites here, there are just those stars


    2. Later in the week, Bahkmar was able to share a voyage with an astrophysicist/soldier friend named Enrico Hasheem who's mission was to attach the navigation motors to the asteroid


    3. It was pretty open country, just enough keltoid brush to get her out of sight in half a mile, she had to use their smoke for navigation


    4. What is smart navigation?


    5.  The flicker effect that may occur on a Web page during navigation is minimized


    6. could see no signs of nautical navigation lights, which was quite


    7. Months of casting out, months of blind navigation, are made worthwhile by the sight of cloud banks over land


    8. The tank is half full and the satellite navigation console is chiding him firmly but softly with a slurred, slow voice, bleeding to death electronically


    9. The air of deep dark was so clear it was like a telescope so he could see the entry to Shipping Cut by it’s navigation lanterns, thirty miles away, and aimed straight for it


    10. is called Indian corn, the two most important improvements which the agriculture of Europe, perhaps, which Europe itself, has received from the great extension of its commerce and navigation

    11. This plugin allows you to add and edit a Heading for your Posts, Pages and Custom Post Types, different from the Title (which is used in the navigation)


    12. An inland country, naturally fertile and easily cultivated, produces a great surplus of provisions beyond what is necessary for maintaining the cultivators; and on account of the expense of land carriage, and inconveniency of river navigation, it may frequently be difficult to send this surplus abroad


    13. Then map out a navigation chart, with AVOID PROCRASTINATING as


    14. When the act of navigation was made, though England and Holland were not actually at war, the most violent animosity subsisted between the two nations


    15. The act of navigation is not favourable to foreign commerce, or to the growth of that opulence which can arise from it


    16. The act of navigation, it is true, lays no burden upon foreign ships that come to export the produce of British industry


    17. As defence, however, is of much more importance than opulence, the act of navigation is, perhaps, the wisest of all the commercial regulations of England


    18. route, he’d instructed Homer in seamanship and navigation


    19. “My training in seamanship and navigation produced an uneventful trip to Cyme, the


    20. Dangling by her feet over the convenient ventilation grate Yula still presided over, the Elf took in the bridge activity, but her focus was on the monitors directly below her---the navigation consoles

    21. As the Naud were nearly completely inept at stellar navigation, the best they could hope was to only ever venture a little ways from wherever they had been before; hence the looping reminders


    22. In 1497, Vasco de Gamo sailed from the port of Lisbon with a fleet of four ships, and, after a navigation of eleven months, arrived upon the coast of Indostan ; and thus completed a course of discoveries which had been pursued with great steadiness, and with very little interruption, for near a century together


    23. by NASA in trajectory navigation, after the


    24. “Here Dena,” Jista waved, “this is the compilation of the data we've extracted from the navigation systems on the nine 'guests' vessels we 'escorted' to the Gorim stations---and the data we gleaned from their command systems that was inserted automatically from all other contact ships over the last four years


    25. These commodities having been enumerated in the act of navigation, and in some other subsequent acts, have upon that account been called enumerated commodities


    26. When, by the act of navigation, England assumed to herself the monopoly of the colony trade, the foreign capitals which had before been employed in it, were necessarily withdrawn from it


    27. Though the wealth of Great Britain has increased very much since the establishment of the act of navigation, it certainly has not increased in the same proportion as that or the colonies


    28. Since the establishment of the act of navigation, accordingly, the colony trade has been continually increasing, while many other branches of foreign trade, particularly of that to other parts of Europe, have been continually decaying


    29. Our manufactures for foreign sale, instead of being suited, as before the act of navigation, to the neighbouring market of Europe, or to the more distant one of the countries which lie round the Mediterranean sea, have the greater part of them, been accommodated to the still more distant one of the colonies; to the market in which they have the monopoly, rather than to that in which they have many competitors


    30. The mercantile capital of Great Britain, though very great, yet not being infinite, and though greatly increased since the act of navigation, yet not being increased in the same proportion as the colony trade, that trade could not possibly be carried on without withdrawing some part of that capital from other branches of trade, nor consequently without some decay of those other branches

    31. England, it must be observed, was a great trading country, her mercantile capital was very great, and likely to become still greater and greater every day, not only before the act of navigation had established the monopoly of the corn trade, but before that trade was very considerable


    32. But this great naval power could not, in either of those wars, be owing to the act of navigation


    33. The trade of the colonies, of which England, even for some time after the act of navigation, enjoyed but a part (for the act of navigation was not very strictly executed till several years after it was enacted), could not at that time be the cause of the great trade of England, nor of the great naval power which was supported by that trade


    34. Whatever may have been, at any particular period since the establishment of the act of navigation, the state or extent of the mercantile capital of Great Britain, the monopoly of the colony trade must, during the continuance of that state, have raised the ordinary rate of British profit higher than it otherwise would have been, both in that and in all the other branches of British trade


    35. If, since the establishment of the act of navigation, the ordinary rate of British profit has fallen considerably


    36. therefore, gum senega was allowed to be imported (contrary to the general dispositions of the act of navigation) from any part of Europe


    37. With inferior art and skill in navigation, therefore, they would be able to sell that cargo as cheap in foreign markets as the merchants of such mercantile nations; and with equal art and skill they would be able to sell it cheaper


    38. By a more extensive navigation, the Chinese would naturally learn the art of using and constructing, themselves, all the different machines made use of in other countries, as well as the other improvements of art and industry which are practised in all the different parts of the world


    39. Both the Egyptians and Indians must have depended almost altogether upon the navigation of other nations for the


    40. Accidents were rare and often due to the driver overruling the navigation system; usually involving a collision with another vehicle, since in urban areas there were just streams intersecting, stacking

    41. In normal flight the hugely powerful main processor would be shut down and pairs of cores would work three month shifts to handle the vessel’s hugely precise navigation and monitor the various systems


    42. If it is not kept in tolerable order, the navigation necessarily ceases altogether, and, along with it, the whole profit which they can make by the tolls


    43. The interior was very basic, there was no apparent navigation control, not even graphics; only a viewscreen


    44. Coals carried, either by land or by inland navigation, pay no duty


    45. Of this kind are the duties, which, in French, are called peages, which in old Saxon times were called the duties of passage, and which seem to have been originally established for the same purpose as our turnpike tolls, or the tolls upon our canals and navigable rivers, for the maintenance of the road or of the navigation


    46. He would also begin to learn the details of navigation, something he would need as captain on a future


    47. One of these was to take more of a part in navigation as well as the command


    48. wrote that it is better to leave a prize so disabled and injured as to be formidable enough to endanger the navigation of the ocean


    49. navigation over to the Shenandoah, and the boat crews were to remain in charge of their respective prizes until further orders were given by Waddell


    50. “Get us there,” and Tony would do it using the sophisticated navigation systems














































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    Synonyms for "navigation"

    navigation sailing seafaring pilotage piloting

    "navigation" definitions

    the guidance of ships or airplanes from place to place


    ship traffic


    the work of a sailor