I knit that sad cloak: how lovely, it will be a sad cloak in everyone's eyes.
In the eyes of everyone.
"What did you build? Did you have a sail?"
"I'm building a sad boat: I ride on the sea day and night, and I ride the sadness of wandering day and night."
"What did you do with white wool?"
"I weave sad shoes: let the footsteps be light and silent, and suddenly appear in everyone's sad ears and be light."
A ship or boat refers to a vehicle that uses the buoyancy of water and relies on the power of manpower, sails and engines (such as steam engines, gas turbines, diesel engines and nuclear power plants) to pull, pull, push, paddle or push propellers and high-pressure nozzles to move on the water.
In addition, civilian ships are usually called boats (junk in ancient times), ships, airplanes and boats, military ships are called ships (junk in ancient times) and warships, and small ships are called boats, junk, rafts or boats, collectively referred to as ships or boats.
Ships are developed with the development of human beings. Whether in wartime or in peacetime, there are ships. Millions of fishermen around the world use fishing boats to catch fish. Wartime naval warfare and maritime munitions are all related to ships. In 2007, there were about 35,000 merchant ships carrying 7.4 million tons of cargo. By 20 1 1 year, about 104304 ships in the world have obtained IMO numbers.