To provide someone with meals and lodging, usually in exchange for money.
To step or climb onto or otherwise enter a ship, aircraft, train or other conveyance.
To capture an enemy ship by going alongside and grappling her, then invading her with a boarding party
To receive meals and lodging in exchange for money.
To obtain meals, or meals and lodgings, statedly for compensation
To cover with boards or boarding.
Antonyms: alight, disembark
To hit (someone) with a wooden board.
To write something on a board, especially a blackboard or whiteboard.
A rebound.
The wall that surrounds an ice hockey rink.
A container for holding pre-dealt cards that is used to allow multiple sets of players to play the same cards.
Paper made thick and stiff like a board, for book covers, etc.; pasteboard.
The distance a sailing vessel runs between tacks when working to windward.
A relatively long, wide and thin piece of any material, usually wood or similar, often for use in construction or furniture-making.
A device (e.g., switchboard) containing electrical switches and other controls and designed to control lights, sound, telephone connections, etc.
A committee that manages the business of an organization, e.g., a board of directors.
Regular meals or the amount paid for them in a place of lodging.
The side of a ship.
A level or stage having a particular layout.
A flat surface with markings for playing a board game.
To give (someone or something) food to eat.
To graze; to cause to be cropped by feeding, as herbage by cattle.
To give to a machine to be processed.
To create the environment where another phonological rule can apply; to be applied before another rule.
To create the syntactic environment in which another syntactic rule is applied; to be applied before another syntactic rule.
To supply with something.
To pass to.
To satisfy, gratify, or minister to (a sense, taste, desire, etc.).
To eat (usually of animals).
To give (someone or something) to (someone or something else) as food.
The part of a machine that supplies the material to be operated upon.
Something supplied continuously.
Food given to (especially herbivorous) non-human animals.
A meal.
A gathering to eat, especially in large quantities.
Encapsulated online content, such as news or a blog, that can be subscribed to.
A straight man who delivers lines to the comedian during a performance.
The forward motion of the material fed into a machine.