Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
My starboard light just went out."
Its green starboard light began blinking.
The plane's port and starboard lights came on and the white light on the tail.
The house's original name was Starboard Light, in reference to Lynch's earlier career as a naval officer.
Where the dock opened on to the river, the port and starboard lights winked red and green, reflected in the puddles.
Nemo was gliding past the Titanic's vast bulk, the starboard lights picking out a line of portholes.
He switched on the external TV camera, and quickly located the faint glow of Don's starboard light, two hundred feet away.
I like the reflected port and starboard lights on the oily water, the rattle of winches, the warm smell from the engine-room skylight.
He switched on the port and starboard lights and the masthead lanterns, then lashed the wheel while he went below for supper.
Again they lifted on a wave, and again and again, ere they could make out the distant green of the Samoset's starboard light.
The starboard light had been swept away and the port light was not visible to Coxswain Blogg at the angle the lifeboat approached the vessel.
We slipped along smoothly in the darkness towards Stornoway harbour accompanied by a small petrel which fluttered, bat-like in the glow from our starboard light.
Quickly, the recovery booms were freed from their angled crutches, just abaft the port and starboard lights, swung out and rigged with recovery wires.
Only one of the starboard lights still probed the dark, so the view that Crista and Ben had from the galley's plaz was gray and black, dreamlike, cold.
At sea, if a vessel can view both port and starboard lights, it is an indication that another vessel is headed directly for them and they must "give way."
Up ahead, they could hear the unmistakable sound of a powerful boat, about a half mile north, traveling directly toward them, its red and green port and starboard lights easily visible in the clear tropical night.
The evening plane from L.A. came down the coast with its port and starboard lights showing, and then the winking light below the fuselage went on and it swung out to sea for a long lazy turn into Lindbergh Field.
When Captain Anderson of the Storstad saw the Empress through the fog he thought, by seeing both Empress's port and starboard lights during its manoeuvre, that the Empress was attempting to pass on the opposite side of the Storstad than previously apparent, and turned his ship to starboard to avoid a collision.