How to Use merchant marine in a Sentence
merchant marine
noun-
The other five were friends — four of them old merchant marine sailors.
—Carl Nolte, SFChronicle.com, 3 Oct. 2020
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Later, Wright served in the army and joined the merchant marine.
—Alice George, Smithsonian Magazine, 23 Mar. 2021
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His mother worked as a hotel housekeeper, and his father was in the merchant marine.
—Jon Caramanica, BostonGlobe.com, 10 June 2019
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The trips were part of the studies for becoming a merchant marine officer.
—David Taylor, Houston Chronicle, 22 Jan. 2018
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The first lesson for the aspiring merchant marines is not about seafaring, but instead about where to seek shelter during an air raid.
—Marc Santora Laetitia Vancon, New York Times, 26 Sep. 2023
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Jean, the oldest brother who was a merchant marine, applies his discipline to keep their warehouse across the street in order.
—Leah Siesfeld, sun-sentinel.com, 13 Oct. 2020
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Her partner, a merchant marine, is regularly away for monthslong trips.
—Elissa Strauss, CNN, 14 Nov. 2020
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Chinese villagers free a merchant marine captain from the communists to take them to Hong Kong in a stern-wheeler.
—Los Angeles Times, 13 Sep. 2019
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The former paratrooper started in the merchant marine as an able-bodied seaman, working his way up to become a mate and eventually a master.
—Kevin Koenig, Robb Report, 15 July 2023
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His father, a merchant marine, was often away and his mother, an immigrant from Belize, had trouble adapting to life in the States.
—Rebecca Keegan, The Hollywood Reporter, 31 July 2023
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The Irishman was working as a merchant marine in Europe when he was captured by the British and sent to colonize Roanoke.
—Michael E. Miller, Washington Post, 17 Mar. 2018
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Education matters Their father was a merchant Marine; mom was a homemaker.
—Roy S. Johnson, AL.com, 17 Sep. 2017
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Judging from trends in the industry, though, current cargo-preference requirements are not adequate to maintain a robust merchant marine.
—Loren Thompson, Forbes, 8 Oct. 2021
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And the labor supply issues in merchant marine transportation are emblematic of the conundrum seen in a variety of decently paying, male-heavy jobs in the trades.
—Talmon Joseph Smith Lindsey Wasson, New York Times, 6 Dec. 2022
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This also applies to individuals who support those in combat such as merchant marines serving aboard vessels or Red Cross personnel.
—Sarah Moore, Freep.com, 26 Jan. 2026
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The 1920 census gives his occupation as merchant marine officer.
—Greg Daugherty, Smithsonian Magazine, 14 Apr. 2022
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Snake Island’s liberation signaled to the Ukrainian merchant marine that the western Black Sea was safe for commerce.
—David Axe, Forbes, 18 Aug. 2022
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There is also an urgent need for a merchant marine capable of supporting the military in wartime and a cadre of skilled tradesmen who can perform vital industrial tasks such as welding and pipe-fitting.
—Alexander B. Gray, WSJ, 18 Aug. 2022
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As Hupp and her parents dined, George Hennard, a former merchant marine, drove a pickup through the restaurant window and moments later started shooting.
—Dallas News, 11 July 2022
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Richardson had been born in London and had gone to sea at the age of 12, at first working as a cabin boy in the British merchant marine, then working his way up the ranks until becoming a captain.
—Gary Kamiya, San Francisco Chronicle, 13 May 2022
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After graduating in 1919, Calder spent a few years testing out career options, among them becoming a merchant marine and working in a ship’s boiler room.
—Rachel Corbett, The Atlantic, 12 Apr. 2020
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The law would not apply to out-of-state visitors renting a boat in Massachusetts, merchant marines, commercial fishermen, or active armed forces members who are authorized to operate a boat.
—Nick Stoico, BostonGlobe.com, 27 Aug. 2023
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Anthony, who has had careers as a scuba diver, carpenter, skydiver, merchant marine and cabinet maker, enjoys riding a motorcycle.
—Diane Fiske, Philly.com, 16 May 2018
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Maybe someone out there heard a story -- a rumor even -- passed down through the years, of the merchant marine and father who simply vanished from Mason City, Iowa on a November day in 1955.
—Juliet Muir, NBC News, 26 May 2018
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Under a 1920 merchant marine law that protects American shipyards from competition, for example, only noncombat ships can be repaired by other countries.
—Damien Cave, New York Times, 17 Oct. 2023
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Kathleen is relentlessly animated and quick-witted, with thick tangerine hair, steely eyes, and an endearing personal idiolect that suggests both an autodidactic reading in philosophy and economics and the gusty crudity of the merchant marine.
—Gideon Lewis-Kraus, WIRED, 18 June 2018
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'merchant marine.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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