KEY, or Quay, a long wharf, usually built of stone, by the side of a harbour or river, and having several shorehouses for the convenience of lading and discharging merchant ships. It is accordingly furnished with posts and rings, whereby they are secured; together with cranes, capsterns, and other engines, to lift the goods into or out of the vessels which lie alongside.
The verb cejare, in old writers, according to Scaliger, signifies to keep in or restrain; and hence came our term key or quay, the ground where they are made being bound in with planks and posts.
KEYS are also certain sunken rocks lying near the surface of the water, particularly in the West Indies.