Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Transport costs were low because of the cheapness of water carriage.
The fact that small consignments are practically ruled out for water carriage operates against the canals for private trade.
Composting systems for water carriage and longdrop toilet facilities, suitable for domestic and public installations.
Improvements in both water carriage and roads were an important pre-condition for the evolution of the home market in its manifold aspects."
A water carriage sewerage system discharged directly into the river, with a chlorination chamber available for disinfection of sewerage as necessary.
The water closet had been patented in 1775 but the widespread use of water carriage for sewage needed abundant water supply and good leakproof glazed drains.
Easy water carriage, excellent road, on the island itself, and good markets for produce in the United States helped the people to make their land almost a show place as a fine rural district.
"The mill is well placed for water carriage, barges containing the foreign grain, &c., being able to come up the river by way of Maldon and unload at the mill door.
It covers domestic as well as international developments of legal, regulatory, economic, and political interest in all modes of transportation - pipelines, freight forwarders, brokers, and air, motor, rail, and water carriage.
The proximity of the distillery also made water carriage convenient, because the distillery was situated at a distance of not more than fifty yards from the river's edge, where every facility for shipping was present.
Such manufactures are generally employed upon the materials which the country produces, and they seem frequently to have been first refined and improved in such inland countries as were, not indeed at a very great, but at a considerable distance from the sea coast, and sometimes even from all water carriage.
There was a further provision in the bills of lading that, in the case of shipment from the United States, the Harter Act should apply and that, unless otherwise provided, the bill of lading was subject to the terms of the Canadian Water Carriage of Goods Act, 1910.
If a manufacturer can have a certain conveniency of sending his goods by water carriage within four miles of his own home, surely that is sufficient, and profit enough, considering that other people must thrive as well as himself; and a proportion of profit to each trade should be the biasing and leading policy of this nation.