Sentences with phrase «ships flying its flag»

The tone was set by the festival t - shirt, which include an art deco style cruise ship flying a flag with a Dusty Cohl - inspired cowboy hat.

Not exact matches

Last night, in a move that surprised the Foreign Office, the Mercosur bloc, which includes major players like Brazil, voted to close their ports to ships flying the Falklands flag.
He further said, «Section 2 (1) of NIMASA Act states that «This Act shall apply to ships, small ships and crafts registered in Nigeria and extended to ships, small ships and crafts flying a foreign flag in the Exclusive Economic Zone, Territorial and Inland Seas, Inland Waterways and in the Ports of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.»
Placed by the German Embassy in Washington, it reminded readers of the existence of the war zone and cautioned that «vessels flying the flag of Great Britain, or of any of her allies, are liable to destruction» and that travelers sailing on such ships «do so at their own risk.»
The ships are Norwegian through and through, reflected in the beautiful interior design, the on - board spa, several dining choices, many of the crew, and even the Norway flag flying from the mast.
Yinka Shonibare's scale model of Nelson's flag ship Victory, sails printed with African textile designs and flying flag signals from the Battle of Trafalgar including «engage the enemy closely», has proved one of the most popular of the fourth plinth sculpture commissions.
The cost of builidng and maintaining the ships could be shared by the two countries, the vessels could fly under both the Canadian and American flags, and the crew could members of the Coast Guards of the United States and Canada.
In addition, where those powers concern the taking of measures against ships, their exercise is liable, depending on the scope of the powers, to interfere with the sovereign rights of third countries according to the flag flown by the ships concerned.
If your ship is flying the flag of any country, that country's laws apply aboard the ship, and that country may board you or authorize another country to board you.
With very few exceptions, the only country with jurisdiction over a ship in international waters is the country whose flag it is flying.
If a ship is not flying the flag of any country (or flying the flags of multiple countries), which included if it's stateless but flying a flag without any right to do so, then every country is permitted to board the ship and enforce their own laws.
Held on Griffin's Wharf at the Boston Tea Party Museum, the event provided a unique venue for guests to mix, mingle, and explore an authentically restored tea ship, from which a R+C flag was flown to mark the occasion.
Not the kind that castles and ships fly or that armies carried into battle (see, e.g., the Battle of the Standard, in reference to which the word was first used in English to mean flag, the OED tells us, because a versifier there wrote: «it was there that valour took its stand to conquer or die»), but growing out of that notion of a centre from which commands are issued all the way to a measure of uniform quality.
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