- A
bollard is a s****y, short,
vertical post. The term
originally referred to a post on a ship or quay used prin****lly for
mooring boats. In
modern usage...
- Look up
bollard in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Wikimedia Commons has
media related to
Bollards. A
bollard is a
short vertical post used in maritime...
-
Bollard pull is a
conventional measure of the
pulling (or towing)
power of a watercraft. It is
defined as the
force (usually in tonnes-force or kilonewtons...
- The
Bollard (formerly
known as Mainer) is a
monthly local magazine based in Portland, Maine,
covering local news and arts. The
Bollard was
founded in 2005...
-
Bollard is a surname.
Notable people with the name include: Alan
Bollard (born 1951),
governor of the
Reserve Bank of New
Zealand Arthur Bollard (1879−1919)...
- John
Bollard may
refer to: Jean
Bolland (1596–1665),
sometimes referred to as John Bolland,
Flemish Roman Catholic priest and
hagiographer John
Bollard (Catholic...
-
Arthur Bollard (1879−1919) was an
Australian rugby league footballer who pla**** in the 1900s and 1910s. He pla**** for
North Sydney in the
NSWRL competition...
-
Barbara Anne
Bollard also
known as
Barbara Breen and
Bollard-Breen, is a New
Zealand academic, and is a
professor at
University of Wollongong. She was...
-
USCGC Bollard (WYTL-65614) is a
cutter in the U.S.
Coast Guard.
Bollard is a
small icebreaking harbor tug that
operates in Long
Island Sound and north...
-
David Bollard (born 1942) is an
Australian classical pianist and teacher.
David Bollard studied with Béla Síki in 1962, then
moved to
London in 1964,...