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Related to docking: Dry docking, tail docking

Dock

 [dok]
Lavinia Lloyd (1858–1956). American pioneer in public health nursing. Beginning with her work with the United Workers of Norwich, Connecticut, she made valuable contributions to public health nursing, including work with Lillian wald at the Henry Street Settlement in New York. In addition, she was active in the women's suffrage movement and an advocate of legislative control of nursing practice. She was also a prolific author; her works include Materia Medica for Nurses, one of the earliest nursing textbooks, and a four-volume History of Nursing, written with Adelaide nutting.
 Lavinia Lloyd Dock. Special collections, Milbank Memorial Library, Teachers College, Columbia University.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

dock

(dŏk)
n.
1. The solid or fleshy part of an animal's tail.
2. The tail of an animal after it has been bobbed or clipped.
tr.v. docked, docking, docks
To clip short or cut off (an animal's tail, for example).
The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2007, 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
These universal docking stations provide a comprehensive solution for shared workstations and CYOD (choose your own device) environments where employee technology and device demands vary.
Therefore, it is important to understand the reasons given for tail docking, to refute them in cases where these suppositions are untrue or to account for reasons which are backed by science, and to value the opinions of farmers who do not tail dock their sheep.
The Dell Wireless Dock demonstrates our commitment to developing cutting edge, innovative solutions that benefit our customers and provides a best-in-class untethered docking experience with the Dell Latitude 6430u Ultrabook for fast, flexible connectivity between devices and peripherals in the office, conference room or classroom, said Brett McAnally, executive director, commercial PC group, Dell.
"The prime requisite for successful cross docking," says TranSystems' Kuchta, "is predictable demand."
In addition, a maintenance docking system has been supplied to SAUDIA in Jeddah for B-747s.
Also, more docking space will allow foreign-flagged vessels to dock and stay in town longer.
"I was so happy to find the DockExtender Boost - it definitely solved my docking issues and I am a very satisfied customer!" -M.
Although cross docking has become something of a buzzword lately, it's a strategy that has been around for decades.
Replacing a ship's rubber fender can cost up to US$100,000, says Erik Nielsen, docking manager at Danish shipping technology developers Marimatech, which makes the laser system.
Patent # 6,256,691) covers the techniques required for "hot docking," which allows the connection of a portable computer to a docking station through a PCMCIA/CardBus slot while the computer is already operational.