|
Definition of Cabin class
1. Noun. A class of accommodations on a ship or train or plane that are less expensive than first class accommodations.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cabin Class
Literary usage of Cabin class
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by American Neurological Association, Philadelphia Neurological Society, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association, Boston Society of Psychiatry and Neurology (1913)
"Aliens of the cabin class are examined on ship-board between quarantine and the
docks, and the examinations are especially difficult owing to the noise and ..."
2. The Principles of Hygiene: A Practical Manual for Students, Physicians, and by David Hendricks Bergey (1901)
"Prior to sailing from ports infected with cholera, each passenger of the cabin
class should produce satisfactory evidence as to his exact place of abode ..."
3. Nebraska, Its Advantages, Resources and Drawbacks...: Its Advantages by Edwin A. Curley (1875)
"... The Cunard line carry in some of their vessels a second cabin class at £18,
and the North German Lloyd's a similar class for £13. ..."
4. Text-book of hygiene: A Comprehensive Treatise on the Principles and by George Henry Rohe (1894)
"Prior to sailing from ports infected with cholera, each passenger of the cabin
class should produce satisfactory evidence as to his exact place of abode ..."
5. The Gold Chain: A California Family Sagaby Regina V. Phelan by Regina V. Phelan (1987)
"... and waited at Panama City until Henry could book passage on the steamer
the "Constitution," cabin class, heading north. That was on the 2nd of October, ..."
6. The Sanitarian by Medico-Legal Society of New York (1893)
"In ports infected with cholera, passengers of the cabin class must produce evidence
as to abode during the four days immediately preceding embarkation, ..."
7. Typhoid and the Politics of Public Health in Nineteenth-century Philadelphia by Michael P. McCarthy (1987)
"The cabin class passengers in particular were upset at that prospect. The ship
had been fumigated in Liverpool before sailing, and no one took ill during ..."