cabotage
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
Noun
cabotage (countable and uncountable, plural cabotages)
- The transport of goods or passengers between two points in the same country.
- 1977, William Armistead Moale Burden, The Struggle for Airways in Latin America, page 51:
- Cabotage traffic may be carried by a foreign carrier on special permission of the civil aeronautics authorities […].
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- (law) The right to engage in such transport.
- 2002'', Kevin Colin Ingram, Xingang Li, Maritime Law and Policy in China, page 19
- Cabotage, used as a legal term, here refers to the right to transport goods or passengers between ports of a country.
- 2002'', Kevin Colin Ingram, Xingang Li, Maritime Law and Policy in China, page 19
- The exclusive right of a country to control such transport.
- 1992, Pablo Mendes de Leon, Cabotage in Air Transport Regulation, page 104:
- Professor Levine distinguishes two kinds of cabotage: "primary cabotage" which can be compared with ninth freedom cabotages and "long-haul limited cabotage" which can be compared with eighth freedom cabotage […].
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Translations
shipping in the same country
Further reading
French
Etymology
Noun
cabotage m (plural cabotages)
Further reading
- “cabotage” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
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