Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


Gangway

Gang′wayˊ

,
Noun.
[See
Gang
,
Verb.
I.
]
1.
A passage or way into or out of any inclosed place; esp., a temporary way of access formed of planks.
2.
In the English House of Commons, a narrow aisle across the house, below which sit those who do not vote steadly either with the government or with the opposition.
3.
(Naut.)
The opening through the bulwarks of a vessel by which persons enter or leave it.
4.
(Naut.)
That part of the spar deck of a vessel on each side of the booms, from the quarter-deck to the forecastle; – more properly termed the waist.
Totten.
Gangway ladder
,
a ladder rigged on the side of a vessel at the gangway.
To bring to the gangway
,
to punish (a seaman) by flogging him at the gangway.

Webster 1828 Edition


Gangway

GANG'WAY

,
Noun.
A passage, way or avenue into or out of any inclosed place, especially a passage into or out of a ship, or from one part of a ship to another; also, a narrow platform of planks laid horizontally along the upper part of a ship's side, from the quarter deck to the forecastle.
To bring to the gangway, in the discipline of ships, is to punish a seaman by seizing him up and flogging him.

Definition 2024


gangway

gangway

English

Noun

gangway (plural gangways)

  1. A passageway through which to enter or leave, such as one between seating areas in an auditorium, or between two buildings.
  2. An articulating bridge or ramp, such as from land to a dock or a ship.
  3. A temporary passageway, such as one made of planks.
  4. (rare, obsolete outside dialects) A clear path through a crowd or a passageway with people.
  5. (Britain) An aisle.
  6. (nautical) A passage along either side of a ship's upper deck.
  7. (nautical) A passage through the side of a ship or though a railing through which the ship may be boarded.
  8. (agricultural) An earthen and plank ramp leading from the stable yard into the upper storey or mow of a dairy barn.

Translations

Verb

gangway (third-person singular simple present gangways, present participle gangwaying, simple past and past participle gangwayed)

  1. To serve as, furnish with, or conduct oneself as though proceeding on a gangway.
    • 2004, Bill Hillsman, Run the Other Way:
      He gangwayed his way through the crowd, and just as the clock struck midnight, he was standing in front of NBC's camera on national TV as the governor-elect of Minnesota and the first Reform Party candidate ever to be elected to high office.
    • 2014, Jude Cook, Byron Easy:
      They're conducting phone conversations without speaking into the wrong end of their mobiles, or gangwaying to the Gents without tripping over, or turning the pages of a newspaper without blacking adjacent eyes.
    • 2014, Kevin McAleer, Dueling: The Cult of Honor in Fin-de-Siecle Germany:
      Here also of exceptional value were the half-dozen dueling codes published after 1880, gangwaying a detailed analysis in chapter II of the manner in which duels unfolded, and dozens of French sources which formed the core of a chapter on the French duel.

Interjection

gangway

  1. (to a crowd) Make way! Clear a path!
    • 1934, P. L. Travers, Mary Poppins, p 157:
      And he pushed his way through the crowd crying, "Gangway, gangway!" and dragging Jane and Michael after him.

Translations