: a warship of classical antiquity compare bireme, trireme
c
: a large open boat (such as a gig) formerly used in England
2
: the kitchen and cooking apparatus especially of a ship or airplane
3
a
: an oblong tray to hold especially a single column of set type
b
: a proof of typeset matter especially in a single column before being made into pages
Illustration of galley
galley 1a
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Belowdecks, a forward bedroom, twin beds aft, a galley, and a full head encourage weekend roaming, while triple Volvo Penta D6 IPS diesels deliver the speed—38 knots top, 28 knots cruise—to get home in a hurry.—Michael Verdon, Robb Report, 16 June 2026 There is a dedicated galley for gluten-free cooking on a separate floor from the main kitchen for any of the cruises that aren’t fully gluten-free.—Elliott Harrell, Travel + Leisure, 8 June 2026 Even aviation insiders like Dean Rotchin, founder of Blackjet, steer clear of the galley brew.—Alesandra Dubin, Southern Living, 7 June 2026 Added to this is a lighter galley cooling system featuring high-efficiency refrigeration units designed for ultra-long-haul operations, where minimizing both odors and power consumption is a priority.—David Szondy
june 02, New Atlas, 2 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for galley
Word History
Etymology
Middle English galeie, galey, borrowed from Anglo-French galee, galeie (continental Old French galee, galie), borrowed (probably in part via Upper Italian dialects) from Middle Greek galéa, after galéa "the shark Galeorhinus galeus," probably re-formation of Greek galeós, a name for the same fish, of uncertain origin