Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

vessel loitering

French translation:

un navire qui traîne / rôde dans nos eaux territoriales

Added to glossary by FX Fraipont (X)
Jul 12, 2019 09:22
4 yrs ago
4 viewers *
English term

vessel loitering

English to French Bus/Financial Ships, Sailing, Maritime Shenanigans at sea
"I think the member for Waitakere is going to the extreme when he talks about an unlicensed vessel loitering within the 12-mile zone. We cannot stop any ship coming into our waters. [...] unless it starts fishing.

https://books.google.fr/books?id=sIoLAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA1853&lpg=...
References
loitering
Change log

Jul 26, 2019 06:59: FX Fraipont (X) Created KOG entry

Proposed translations

+2
12 mins
Selected

un navire qui traîne / rôde dans nos eaux territoriales

..
Note from asker:
Thanks again FX! Merci beaucoup !
Peer comment(s):

agree Daryo : qui traîne // "qui rôde" would be "prowling" - not the same, implies far more predatory intent.
11 hrs
agree Michael Confais (X)
5 days
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."
2 hrs

Un navire en maraude

She may be looking for trouble, or simply trying to find a shoal of tuna, or just a bit lost...
Peer comment(s):

neutral Daryo : if you put it that way, you are presuming with certainty that they are up to no good for sure which IS NOT implied in the ST otherwise they would jump on them without any further ado - "loitering" is just potentially suspicious.
1 day 5 hrs
I do!
Something went wrong...
-1
4 days

navire qui pénètre dans la zone des 12 miles nautiques

Nombreuses occurrences pour "pénétrer dans les eaux territoriales"
Note from asker:
52,200 results is definitely very meaningful as far as I'm concerned. The answer is certainly a valid one.
Peer comment(s):

disagree Daryo : "Nombreuses occurrences pour .... XYZ" ne prouve rien du tout.
13 hrs
Je pense au contraire que cela prouve que le terme est largement usité. Les sources sont à la fois des textes juridiques et des articles de presse.
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Reference comments

4 days
Reference:

loitering

loiter
v. to linger or hang around in a public place or business where one has no particular or legal purpose. In many states, cities, and towns there are statutes or ordinances against loitering by which the police can arrest someone who refuses to "move along." There is a question as to whether such laws are constitutional. However, there is often another criminal statute or ordinance which can be applied specifically to control aggressive begging, soliciting prostitution, drug dealing, blocking entries to stores, public drunkenness, or being a public nuisance.

loiter verb be idle, be vagrant, cessare, hang around, idle, linger, move aimlessly, pass time in idleness, poke, stand around, tarry, wander aimlessly
Associated concepts: vagrancy
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