moor

/muə/
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moor

A small boat is moored to a wooden dock on a calm lake.

Definition
  1. Noun:

    • A tract of open uncultivated upland: An area of open, often high land, typically characterized by peaty soil, heather, bracken, and moss. It is a type of heathland.
    • A member of a Muslim people of mixed Arab and Berber descent: Historically, a member of the Muslim population of northwest Africa, particularly those who conquered the Iberian Peninsula in the 8th century.
  2. Verb:

    • To secure a boat or ship in a particular place: To fasten a vessel to a fixed object or anchor using ropes, cables, or chains.
    • To come to or be at a wharf or dock: To bring a vessel to a pier or similar structure and secure it there.
Usage Examples
  • Noun (Land):

    • The hikers trekked across the windswept moor.
    • The novel is set on the bleak, foggy moors of Yorkshire.
  • Noun (People):

    • The Moors established a sophisticated civilization in Al-Andalus (Spain).
  • Verb (To secure a vessel):

    • We need to moor the sailboat before the storm arrives.
    • The captain ordered the crew to moor the ship to the buoy.
  • Verb (To be at a wharf):

    • The ferry will moor at the island's main dock at noon.
Advanced Usage
  • "To be moored": To be securely fastened in place.

    • The yacht was safely moored in the harbor.
  • "Mooring" (noun): The act of securing a vessel; also, the place where a vessel is moored or the equipment (e.g., ropes, buoys) used for this purpose.

    • The boat broke free from its mooring during the gale.
Variants and Related Words
  • Moorland (n): Another term for an extensive area of moor.

    • The conservation project aims to protect the local moorland.
  • Mooring (n): As defined above.

  • Unmoor (v): To release a vessel from its moorings.
    • They will unmoor the ship at dawn.
Synonyms
  • Noun (Land): Heath, heathland, fell (Northern England), upland.
  • Verb (To secure): Tie up, berth, dock, secure, anchor, fasten.
Related Phrasal Verbs
  • Moor up: To moor a boat, especially at a specific place.
    • Let's find a quiet spot to moor up for the night.
Related Idioms
  • "To be cast adrift/moored in the past": While not a direct idiom with "moor," the verb's concept is used metaphorically. "Moored in the past" suggests being fixed or stuck in bygone times, unable to move forward.
    • His thinking is moored in the past and resistant to new ideas.
moor

A small boat is moored to a wooden dock on a calm lake.

Noun
  1. open land usually with peaty soil covered with heather and bracken and moss
  2. one of the Muslim people of north Africa; of mixed Arab and Berber descent; converted to Islam in the 8th century; conqueror of Spain in the 8th century
Verb
  1. secure with cables or ropes
    • moor the boat
  2. come into or dock at a wharf
    • the big ship wharfed in the evening
  3. secure in or as if in a berth or dock
    • tie up the boat