English edit

Etymology edit

port +‎ side

Adjective edit

portside (not comparable)

  1. On the port (left) side of a ship.
    • 2007 July 10, James Hickey, “Airline War Stories, Expert Division”, in New York Times[1]:
      All was quiet for several minutes until the fog broke and a large oak tree passed outside my portside window.
    • 2010, Justin Merrigan, Ian Collard, Holyhead to Ireland: Stena and Its Welsh Heritage, →ISBN:
      The portside lounge in shades of tan and yellow seated sixty-six passengers while a TV Lounge on the starboard side could accommodate forty-eight passengers in a predominantly blue space.

Noun edit

portside (plural portsides)

  1. An area alongside a port.
  2. The port (left) side of a boat.
    • 1967, Ernest D. McRae, The West German research vessel W̲a̲l̲t̲h̲e̲r̲ H̲e̲r̲w̲i̲g̲:
      The net is taken in by repeatedly strapping off lengths of the net that are hauled forward alternately from the portside and starboardside; the pile of netting in the foreground is made from successive bights of the net resulting from this procedure.
    • 2012, D. Josephus Jitta, The Renovation of International Law, →ISBN:
      It is obvious that the reasonable principles do not require a merchant ship to bear a green light at her starboardside and a red light at her portside, but if each State were to regulate the colour and the place of the lights with unlimited sovereignty, and without regard for the uniformity, the regulation would be a danger instead of a measure of precaution.

Adverb edit

portside (comparative more portside, superlative most portside)

  1. Toward or on the port side.
    • 1959, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Appropriations, Civil functions, Department of the Army, page 2614:
      Ship was to dock portside to at pier 1 but ended up starboardside as docking became seriously complicated

Anagrams edit