shipwreck

കപ്പൽച്ചേതം
definition
verb
he was shipwrecked off the coast of Sardinia and nearly drowned
(of a person or ship) suffer a shipwreck.
noun
With the help of his faithful spirit Ariel, Prospero conjures up a great storm causing a shipwreck on the shore nearby.
the destruction of a ship at sea by sinking or breaking up, e.g., in a storm or after running aground.
example
It is a fable recalled by a lonely man who lies between the clumps of grass on the sands by a river (the scene looks deceptively lyrical), like a survivor washed ashore after a 'shipwreck' .
Some say St Patrick himself built the chapel after surviving a 'shipwreck' on the rocks below.
The dig, which began Monday, was a second priority for the divers, whose main goal was to survey the 'shipwreck' site for storm damage.
I was an avid wreck diver, and it was the ultimate 'shipwreck' .
the angry waves, whose fury heralds 'shipwreck'
To find out why this happened and when we must go back to the thirteenth history and a 'shipwreck' off the Wexford coast.
The irony is that every time someone finds and salvages an old 'shipwreck' , archaeologists scream their heads off and accuse the divers and salvors of looting and obliterating an underwater site.
Property insurance developed in response to the hazards faced by medieval exporters, for example losses from 'shipwreck' , piracy, or theft.
For Virilio, to invent the ship is to invent the 'shipwreck' and to invent the train is to invent the derailment.
The story is of the utmost simplicity: after a 'shipwreck' , a sailor is lost at sea.
In 1675, however, the Caribs welcomed black Africans who survived the 'shipwreck' of a Dutch ship carrying settlers and slaves.
With the help of his faithful spirit Ariel, Prospero conjures up a great storm causing a 'shipwreck' on the shore nearby.
the detritus of a forgotten 'shipwreck'
by rejecting conscience, they have made a 'shipwreck' of their faith
According to one legend, the ponies on this 37-mile-long barrier island are descendants of horses that survived the 'shipwreck' of a Spanish galleon.
The Heritage Office has released a 'shipwreck' conservation management plan that documents the discovery of the submarine.
The agency stress that it is illegal to keep something, however small or seemingly insignificant, from a 'shipwreck' without advising the Receiver of Wreck.
There, two old keys made of gold and silver are exhibited in a window as part of the treasure of historical information salvaged from a local 'shipwreck' .
The annals of the marine record no example of a 'shipwreck' so terrible as that of the Medusa frigate.
the detritus of a forgotten 'shipwreck' in an Arctic sea
On the way, a great windstorm causes a 'shipwreck' and a lone sailor is found on the ‘Island of the Soul.’
The Museum houses an impressive collection of artefacts and pictures relating to many famous ships and 'shipwrecks' .
Besides the reef, the Keys are full of accidental and manmade 'shipwrecks' to dive on.
Our tour of Corsica ends at Bastia, which has several 'shipwrecks' and a number of aircraft wrecks.
By the end of the novel he is spiritually 'shipwrecked' on the Gold Coast, having visions of ancient goddesses.
With a treacherous shoreline and marine traffic for many thousands of years, the coast of Ireland is strewn with 'shipwrecks' , or sites where vessels have foundered.
The Sussex coast at this point lacks any rocks or cliffs, and 'shipwrecks' were never common here.
Accounts written by other mariners 'shipwrecked' along the same coast chronicled brutal enslavement at the hands of ruthless desert nomads.
Unesco has adopted a new cultural convention to protect historic 'shipwrecks' and underwater artefacts from pillaging.
They took their name from the piece of equipment which was used in the 19th century to rescue 'shipwrecked' vessels.
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