Steerage definition

Steerage means the minimum rate of motion required for the steering apparatus (rudder or motor) of a vessel to have effect.

Examples of Steerage in a sentence

  • Remove “In Anchorage” from PPO Steerage language (Same 50% Copay if using a non PPO hospital).

  • Almost forty percent of the passengers traveled in the first two classes, as the North German ▇▇▇▇▇ catered to a substantial number of affluent travelers, who were the most profitable passengers for the company.12 Steerage passage between Bremerhaven and Baltimore cost $30 in the 1890s; a second­class berth cost $46.

  • Definition: Preferred Provider guarantees a positive response rate of 90% or better for Group’s PPO members on the standard Preferred Provider Performance Tracking Process for the Medicare Advantage Steerage and ESA PPO products.

  • Pharmacy Steerage: Employees who use CVS or Walgreens will pay an additional $10 copay per prescription.

Related to Steerage

  • Pruning means the removal, as appropriate, of not more than one-third of the live branches or limbs of a tree in accordance with Good Arboricultural Practice.

  • Pilot or "Payment in Lieu of Tax" shall mean any payment made to the Agency or an affected tax jurisdiction equal to all or a portion of the real property taxes or other taxes which would have been levied by or on behalf of an affected tax jurisdiction with respect to a project but for tax exemption obtained by reason of the involvement of the Agency in such project, but such term shall not include Agency fees.

  • Cider means any alcoholic beverage obtained by the

  • Seaplane means a fixed wing aircraft which is designed for taking off and landing on water and includes amphibians operated as seaplanes;

  • MECAB refers to the Multiple Exchange Carrier Access Billing document prepared by the Billing Committee of the Ordering and Billing Forum “OBF”, which functions under the auspices of the Carrier Liaison Committee “CLC of the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions “ATIS”. The MECAB document, published by ATIS as ATIS/OBF- MECAB- Issue 6, February 1998, contains the recommended guidelines for the billing of access services provided to an IXC by two or more LECs, or by one LEC in two or more states within a single LATA.