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sail•boat
- a small sailing vessel; usually with a single mast - a sailboat with two parallel hulls held together by single deck - a sailboat with a single mast set far forward , , , - a retractable fin keel used on sailboats to prevent drifting to leeward , - a vessel that is powered by the wind; often having several masts - a shallow-draft sailboat with a sharp prow, flat bottom, and triangular sail; formerly used along the northern Atlantic coast of the United States - a fast sailboat with 3 parallel hulls |
- centerboard
- centreboard
- compassable
- cut corners
- cut to the chase
- daggerboard
- Saiga tatarica
- Saigo Takamori
- Saigon cinnamon
- Sail burton
- sail through
- sailboarder
- sailboarding
- sailboating
- sailing boat
- sailing dinghy
- sailing master
- Sailing orders
- sailing ship
- sailing vessel
- sailing warship
- sailing-race
- sailor collar
- Sailor King
- sailor suit
- sail up the/a/ river
- sail up the/a/(some) river
- sail vertebra
- Sail Window Conformal Array
- Sail-Lollipop Regatta Verein
- Sailboard Vacations
- sailboarded
- sailboarders
- Sailboat racing
- Sailboat, Auxiliary
- Sailboating
- sailed against the wind
- sailed along
- sailed around
- sailed before the wind
- sailed close to the wind
- sailed from here to there
- sailed from place to place
- sailed from some place to some place
- sailed from somewhere to somewhere
- sailed from to
- sailed into
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Meaning of sailboat in English
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- cabin cruiser
- dragon boat
- rubber dinghy
sailboat | Intermediate English
Examples of sailboat, translations of sailboat.
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Word of the Day
play for time
to delay until you are ready
Like a bull in a china shop: talking about people who are clumsy
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- Paddle Board
A to Z of Nautical Terms: A Complete Glossary of Boat Terminology
Are you a new boat owner? Whether you bought a jet ski or a 40-foot cabin cruiser, you’re going to need to understand the lingo while you’re out on the water. Here’s a glossary of basic nautical terms to have you sounding like a sailor.
Toward the stern of the vessel.
A sail position with the wind striking on its leeward side.
Around or near the stern of the vessel.
At a right-angle to the boat’s center-line.
Lashing the helm to the leeward side to ride out bad weather without the sails set.
The center of the deck of the vessel between the fore-and-aft.
Automatic Identification System.
Apparent Wind
The speed and direction of the wind combined with the boat’s movement and the true wind speed and direction.
To look behind the boat while driving in reverse.
Automatic Radar Plotting Aid.
Athwartships
At a right-angle to the aft-and-fore line of the vessel.
The act of measuring the angular distance on the horizon circle in a clockwise method, typically between a heavenly body and an observer.
When the wind starts to shift in an anti-clockwise direction.
Back a sail
Sheeting the sail to the windward direction, so the wind fills the sail on the leeward side.
The stay supports the aft from the mast, preventing its forward movement.
Baggywrinkle
The teased-out plaited rope wound around the stays or shrouds preventing chaffing.
Iron or lead weights are fixed in a low-access area of the vessel or on the keel to stabilize the boat.
A flexible and lightweight strip feeds into the sail leech’s batten pocket, supporting the roach.
Ballast Keel
A ballast bolted to the keel, increasing the vessel’s stability to prevent capsizing.
The widest point of the vessel or a traverse member supporting the deck. On the beam, objects are at a right-angle to the center-line.
Taking the action of steering the vessel away from the wind.
To tag a zig-zagging approach into the wind or close-hauling with alternate tacks.
The object’s direction from the observer measured in magnetic or true degrees.
To fasten the rope around the cleat using a figure-8 knot.
Securing the sail to the spar before hoisting it or connecting two ropes using a knot.
A sleeping quarters on a boat or a slip occupied by a vessel in a marina or harbor.
The loop or bend in a knot.
The round, lower part of the hull where the water collects.
The pulley fixed inside a plastic or wooden casing with a rope running around a sheave and changing to pulling direction.
Boot-Topping
The narrow-colored stripe is painted between the topside enamel and bottom paint.
The heeling action of the boat when it slews to the broadside while running downwind. Abroach usually occurs in heavy seas.
Broad Reach
The point of sailing the vessel between a run and the beam reach with the wind blowing over the quarter.
The partitioning wall in the vessel athwartship.
A measurement of distance equal to 0.1-sea mile, 185-meters, or 200-yards.
Center-Line
The center of the vessel along the aft-to-fore line.
Center-Board
A board lowers through a slot on the keel for reducing leeway.
The fitting slipping over the boom like a claw. It attaches to the main sheet after you finish reefing the sail.
Chart Datum
The reference level on the charts below which the low tide level. The sounding features below the chart datum. The datum level varies depending on country and area.
The metal, wooden, or plastic fitting used to secure ropes.
Close-Hauled
The skill of sailing close to the wind, also known as beating.
The lower, aft corner of the sail where the leech and foot meet.
Close Reach
The point where you’re sailing between the beam reach and the close-hauled or when the wind blows toward the forward of the beam.
The direction that you steer the vessel in degrees. Mariners can use true or magnetic readings or use a compass to plot the course.
Close-Winded
The act of sailing a boat close to the wind.
The rope loop at either end of the line reef points or an eye in a sail.
The difference between the direction indicated by the magnetic meridian and the compass needle, caused by carrying metal objects aboard the vessel.
Sailing with the wind blowing to the aft, in line with the center-line of the vessel.
Displacement
The displacement hull design displaces boat weight in the water and is only supported by its buoyancy.
The weight of the water displaced by the vessel is equal to the vessel’s weight.
The rope used to pull down the spar or sail.
To float the vessel with the wind or current. Or the distance covered by the boat while drifting in the current, measured in time.
The distance between the lowest point on the keel and the center-line of the vessel measured as a vertical distance.
The sea anchor thrown over the stern of a life raft or boat or to reduce drift.
Digital Selective Calling (a function on Marine radios ).
A retractable keel drawn into the vessel’s hull.
Emergency Position Indication Radio Beacon.
Estimated Position.
Estimated Time of Departure.
Estimated Time of Arrival.
The fitting adjusting the feeding line allows you to change the direction of the lead line.
The raised border on cabin tables, chart tables, preventing objects from falling off the surface.
Measurement of water depth and rope lengths.
- 1 Fathom = 6-feet = 1.83-meters.
The vessel positioning plotted by two or more positioning lines.
The vertical distance between the top of the deck and the waterline.
The closest stay running between the masthead and stemhead, hankering the mainsail.
A large-size headsail is available in various sizes, overlapping the mainsail before hoisting in fresh to light winds on all sailing points.
Two concentric rings pivot at right-angles to keep objects horizontal despite the swaying motion of the boat.
Global Navigation Satellite System.
Global Maritime Distress and Safety System.
To change tack by turning the boat into the eye of the wind.
Booming out the headsail in a windward position using the whisker pole to hold it on the opposite side of the mainsail.
The fitting anchoring the mast to the boom, allowing free movement in all directions.
This metal rail surrounds the boat’s edges, allowing easy gripping to prevent falling overboard.
Turning the stern through the wind to change from one tack to another.
The spinnaker guy controls the steadying rope for the spar through the aft-fore position of the spinnaker pole. The foreguy keeps the spinnaker pole in the forward position.
Global Positioning System.
The rope hoisting the lower sails.
Highest Astronomical Tide.
The fitting for attaching the sail’s luff to a stay.
The deck opening provides the crew with access to the berth or cabin interior.
The streamlined surround of a forestay featuring the groove allows for the sliding attachment of the luff sides of the headsail.
Head-to-Wind
When the bow of the vessel points into the direction of the wind.
The forward motion of the vessel through the water.
The toilet.
The action of backing the jib and lashing the tiller to the leeward side in rough weather conditions. The heave-to encourages the vessel to reduce headway and lie quietly.
When the vessel exaggeratedly leans to one side.
International Maritime Organization.
International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea.
International Telecommunication Union
The lines on weather maps joining places with equal atmospheric pressure.
The temporary device for replacing damaged or lost gear.
The line running from aft-to-fore on both sides of the vessel. The jackstays allow for the clipping attachment of safety harnesses to prevent being lost at sea when falling overboard.
A secondary, smaller, lightweight anchor.
A dual-masted sailboat featuring a mizzen mast that’s slightly smaller than its mainmast, with a stepped forward position of the rudder post/stock.
The center-line of the vessel features the attachment of the ballast keel, allowing for the lowering of the center-board.
Kicking Strap
The line for pulling down the boom or keeping it in the horizontal position when on a run or reach.
A short length of line attached to an important object that you don’t want to lose, such as the jet ski key. The lanyard can connect to your wrist or lifejacket.
The aft edge of the triangular sail. Both side-edges of a square sail.
Lowest Astronomical Tide.
The shore on which the wind is blowing.
The natural tendency of vessels to bear away from the direction of the wind.
Moving in a direction away from the wind. The direction in which the wind is blowing.
The vessel’s leaning to one side due to improper distribution of weight in the boat’s hull.
The leading edge of the sail. Luffing up is turning the head of the boat into the wind.
The sideways motion off course resulting from the wind blowing on one side of the hull and sails.
The instrument for measuring the distance and speed of a boat traveling through the water. It is also the act of recording the details of a voyage in a logbook.
Marinized engine
A car engine or motorbike motor adapted for use in watercraft.
Maritime and Coastguard Agency.
The keel socket locating the base of the mast.
Measured Mile
The distance marked on charts measures one nautical mile between islands at sea or onshore ranges.
The short after-mast on the yawl or ketch.
This imaginary longitudinal line circling the earth, passing through both poles, cutting at right-angles through the equator.
Mean Low Water Neaps.
Mean High Water Neaps.
Mean High Water Springs.
Mean Low Water Springs.
Maritime Mobile Service Identity.
The rope used for pulling out the sail’s foot.
Overall Length (LOA)
The extreme length of the vessel. The measurement from the aftmost point of the stern to the foremost points of the bow. This measurement excludes the self-steering gear, bowsprit, etc.
An emergency call requesting immediate assistance.
The bowline on a tender or dinghy for towing or making fast.
To gradually let out the rope.
The left-hand side of the vessel when looking forward.
Point of Sailing
The angles of the wind allowing for the sailing of the boat. Or the boat’s course relative to its direction and the direction of the wind.
Your vessel is on its port track when the wind is striking the boat’s port side first, and the mainsail is out to the starboard side.
Line of Position/Position Line
The line on charts shows the bearing of the vessel and the position where the boat mist lie. Or two positional lines providing a location fix.
The steel guard rail fitted to the bow to provide additional safety for the crew when working around the boat’s edge.
The steel guard rail fitted around the stern of the boat to prevent the crew from falling overboard.
The section of the vessel midway between the beam and the stern.
The difference in water levels between the high and low tides is the range of tides. Or the distance at which you can see the light.
The act of reducing the sail surface area through folding or rolling additional materials onto the forestay or boom.
Reefing Pennant
The sturdy line allowing you to pull down the leech cringle or luff to the boom while reefing.
When sailing with the wind blowing onto the beam, with all sailing points between close-hauled and running.
Riding Sail
The small sail you hoist to maintain the steerage way during stormy weather.
The imaginary line cuts through all meridians at the same angle. Or the course of the vessel moving in a fixed direction.
Rigging Screw
The deck fitting allowing for tensioning of the standing rigging.
The act of sailing with the wind to the aft of the vessel and with the sails eased into the wide-out, full position.
The curve in a leech sail extending beyond the direct line formed from clew to head.
Running Rigging
All moving lines like halyards and sheets used for trimming and setting sails.
Search and Rescue.
A vessel with two or more masts and the mainmast featured in the aftermost position.
Search and Rescue Transponder.
The toe-rail holes allowing water to drain off the deck.
The room in which the vessel can maneuver clear of submerged dangers.
The shut-off valve for the underwater outlet or inlet passing through the vessel’s hull.
This is French for “radio silence.” You’ll use it when reporting a distress call or incident at sea.
The act of hoisting a sail. Or how the sails fit or the direction of a tidal stream or current.
A procedure word for identifying safety calls.
A steel link featuring a removable bolt crossing the open end. The shackle comes in various designs, from “S” to “U” shapes and more.
The cables or ropes typically fund in pairs, leading from the mast to the chainplates at the deck level. These shrouds prevent the mast from falling to the side, and it’s part of your standing rigging.
The rope attaching to the boom to the sail’s clew allows for the trimming and control over the sail.
Skin Fitting
A through-hull fitting featuring a hole in its skin allows for air and water passing. The seacock is the accessory used for sealing the cavity when not in use.
A boat with a single-masted design for one headsail and one mainsail.
The general term for any metal or wooden pole on board a boat. The pole gives shape to the sails.
Safety of Life at Sea.
Speed Over the Ground
A lightweight, large balloon-shaped sail for running or reacting.
The horizontal struts attach to the mast and extend to the shrouds to assist with supporting the mast.
The act of joining wires or ropes using a weaving process interlacing the fibers in the cable or rope.
The sail will stall if the airflow over the sail surface breaks up, causing the vessel to lose its momentum.
Standing Part
The part of the line you don’t use when making a knot. Or the part of a rope you use to tie around the knot.
The metal post bolted to the deck in an upright position to support the guard railing.
Standing Rigging
The stays and shrouds provide permanent support to the mast.
Starboard Tack
The vessel is on the starboard tack when the boom is out to post, and the wind strikes the boat’s starboard side.
The right-hand side of the vessel when looking forward.
The rope or wire supports the mast in the fore-and-aft direction. It is a part of the standing rigging for your boat.
The sternward movement of the vessel towards the backward direction.
Steerage Way
The vessel has steerage when it reaches sufficient speed, allowing for steering or answering the helm.
The loop of rope or wire attaches the spar to the block to make a sling.
The railing around the vessel’s stern prevents the crew from falling overboard. Modern yachts do not have the elegant wooden railing of older models. Instead, they feature tubular steel or aluminum railings, called Pushpits.
Telegraph Buoy
The buoy marks the position of a submerged cable.
To pull on the end of the rope or cable, wound around a winch.
The compass mounted over the captain’s berth, allowing for the easy reference to what’s going on in the vessel’s helm.
The metal fitting forming eyes at the end of cables, wires, or ropes.
A description for any small boat, usually inflatable models. These boats will take supplies and people between a larger vessel and the shore.
Thermal Wind
The wind occurring from the difference in the heating of the sea and the land by the sun. The sun heats the land faster than the sea, resulting in the onshore wind from the sea replacing the air rising over the land, causing the “sea breeze” phenomenon.
Thumb Cleat
A small cleat featuring a single horn.
The wooden pegs featuring vertical pairs in the gunwale for constraining the oars for rowing.
Topping Lift
The rope linking the mast to the boom end. It supports the boom, allowing for its lowering and raising.
The progress on the vessel’s journey over the ocean. The trajectory line of the boat.
The sides of the hull between the waterline and the deck.
The netting stretching across the hulls of a catamaran.
A watch period or watch duty at the helm of the vessel.
Traverse beams forming part of the stern and fixed to the sternpost of a wooden ship.
Tricolor Lamp
A lamp displaying red in proper port sectors, green in the starboard sectors, and white astern. Some authorities permit the tri-color light on smaller boats instead of conventional stern and bow lights.
Turk’s Head
A decorative knot featuring variable numbers of interwoven strands that form a closed loop.
The direction and velocity of wind measured by stationary observers. Apparent wind is wind experienced by moving objects.
Sturdy steel fittings used for attaching standing rigging to the spar or mast.
The low, forward corner of the sail. Or the action of turning the boat through the wind to get it to blow on the other side of the sails.
Sailing close-hauled to work windward on an alternate course. The wind is on one side then the other.
The low strip of steel, wood, or strapping running along the edge of the deck. You’ll use it in combination with the hand railing to hold your feet to the deck to prevent falling overboard.
The rise and fall of the ocean are caused by the moon’s gravitational effect on the earth and the ocean.
The line moving from the mast had to the spar or the boom used in raising it.
To adjust the sail angle using sheets to achieve optimal efficiency from the sail. Or it describes the action of adjusting the load, influencing the fore-and-aft angle at which it floats.
The course of the boat making good on its travel plan. A fitting of on the boom or mast to the slide on the sail fit. The fitting along which the traveler runs for altering the sheet tension.
The speed and direction of the wind when anchored, stationary on the water, or land.
Turn Buckle
The apparatus used for tightening the standing rigging on the vessel.
A line used in raising something like a spinnaker pole vertically.
The vessel is underway when it releases it fastening to shore when it is not aground or at anchor.
See kicking strap.
The wind will veer when shifting in a clockwise direction. Veering can also mean paying out anchor rope or cable in a controlled manner.
Velocity Made Good
Very High Frequency
The disturbed water left behind (astern) the boat as it moves forward in the water, usually caused by a motor.
Weather Helm
The tendency of the vessel to turn into the wind.
The distance between the radio waves.
Weather Side
The side of the vessel to which the wind is blowing.
World Geodetic Survey of 1984 (most common chart datum).
A mechanical device featuring a cable or line attached to a motor. The winch pulls the boat aboard the trailer and helps with the vessel’s launch from the trailer. The winch also gives more pulling power to withdrawing nets or other apparatus from the water.
Whisker Pole
A lightweight pole used for holding the clew out of the headsail when on a run.
The winch features a vertical handle and a horizontal shaft used in hauling up the anchor chain.
The parts of the vessel that increase the drag on the boat. Examples would be the spars, rigging, etc.
The direction from which the wind blows toward the wind (the opposite way to leeward).
Cross Track Error. The perpendicular distance between two waypoints off track.
A dual-masted vessel with its mizzen stepped aft of its rudder post/stock.
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Vocabulary
What does sailboat mean?
Definitions for sailboat ˈseɪlˌboʊt sail·boat, this dictionary definitions page includes all the possible meanings, example usage and translations of the word sailboat ., princeton's wordnet rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votes.
sailboat, sailing boat noun
a small sailing vessel; usually with a single mast
Wiktionary Rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votes
- sailboat noun
a boat propelled by sails
a playing card with the rank of four
Wikipedia Rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votes
A sailboat or sailing boat is a boat propelled partly or entirely by sails and is smaller than a sailing ship. Distinctions in what constitutes a sailing boat and ship vary by region and maritime culture.
ChatGPT Rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votes
A sailboat is a type of watercraft that is propelled primarily by one or more sails and controlled by a rudder. Unlike motorboats, sailboats utilize the wind as their main source of propulsion. They come in various sizes and types, ranging from small, single-person crafts to large, multi-deck vessels. Some common uses for sailboats include racing, recreation, and long-distance voyages.
Webster Dictionary Rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votes
Sailboat noun
a boat propelled by a sail or sails
Wikidata Rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votes
A sailboat or sailing boat is a boat propelled partly or entirely by sails.The generic term covers a variety of boats, larger than small vessels such as sailboards and smaller than sailing ships, but distinctions in the size are not strictly defined and what constitutes a sailing ship, sailboat, or a smaller vessel varies by region and maritime culture.
Matched Categories
- Sailing Vessel
Usage in printed sources From:
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How to pronounce sailboat?
Alex US English David US English Mark US English Daniel British Libby British Mia British Karen Australian Hayley Australian Natasha Australian Veena Indian Priya Indian Neerja Indian Zira US English Oliver British Wendy British Fred US English Tessa South African
How to say sailboat in sign language?
Chaldean Numerology
The numerical value of sailboat in Chaldean Numerology is: 4
Pythagorean Numerology
The numerical value of sailboat in Pythagorean Numerology is: 7
Examples of sailboat in a Sentence
Tracy Chavous :
I started out wanting to sail and then I saw there was a sailboat that took you whale watching, that was awesome. And then there was a guarantee of seeing the whales. It was traditional and we wanted to see people sailing. That's what we got.
Andreas Simic :
Without planning you are like a sailboat at sea. You will go in the direction of the wind’s whim and you will never get to where you want to go. The wind is like the opinion of others, take it for what it is and use it only when it will take you where you want to go.
Mark Reinecke :
I've had it there behind the house trying to think of something to do with it, that boat is like part of our family, but we also feel that the sailboat deserves to be at sea, not just sitting there, so when this situation came up, we said, 'Let them have it'. It's like passing it on to the next generation.
Without planning you are like a sailboat at sea. You will go in the direction of the wind’s whim and you will never get to where you want to go. The wind is like the opinion of others, take it for what it is and use it only when it will take you where you want to go.”
Popularity rank by frequency of use
- ^ Princeton's WordNet http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=sailboat
- ^ Wiktionary https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Sailboat
- ^ Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailboat
- ^ ChatGPT https://chat.openai.com
- ^ Webster Dictionary https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sailboat
- ^ Wikidata https://www.wikidata.org/w/index.php?search=sailboat
- ^ Usage in printed sources https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=sailboat
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Definition of boat
(Entry 1 of 2)
Definition of boat (Entry 2 of 2)
transitive verb
intransitive verb
Examples of boat in a Sentence
These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'boat.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Word History
Middle English boot , from Old English bāt ; akin to Old Norse beit boat
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
13th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense
Phrases Containing boat
- assault boat
- boat people
- flying boat
- fresh / just off the boat
- in the same boat
- miss the boat
- motor torpedo boat
- narrow boat
- push the boat out
- rock the boat
- rowing boat
- torpedo boat
Articles Related to boat
What's the difference between a 'boat'...
What's the difference between a 'boat' and a 'ship'?
And which one holds the gravy?
Dictionary Entries Near boat
boastworthy
Cite this Entry
“Boat.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary , Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/boat. Accessed 7 Sep. 2024.
Kids Definition
Kids definition of boat.
Kids Definition of boat (Entry 2 of 2)
More from Merriam-Webster on boat
Nglish: Translation of boat for Spanish Speakers
Britannica English: Translation of boat for Arabic Speakers
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- a vessel for transport by water, constructed to provide buoyancy by excluding water and shaped to give stability and permit propulsion.
a fishing boat.
They lowered the boats for evacuation.
- a vessel of any size built for navigation on a river or other inland body of water.
a gravy boat;
a celery boat.
- Ecclesiastical. a container for holding incense before it is placed in the censer.
verb (used without object)
We boated down the Thames.
verb (used with object)
They boated us across the bay.
- to remove (an oar) from the water and place athwartships. Compare ship 1 ( def 10 ) .
- a small vessel propelled by oars, paddle, sails, or motor for travelling, transporting goods, etc, esp one that can be carried aboard a larger vessel
- (not in technical use) another word for ship
- navy a submarine
- a container for gravy, sauce, etc
- a small boat-shaped container for incense, used in some Christian churches
- in the same boat sharing the same problems
- burn one's boats See burn 1
- miss the boat to lose an opportunity
- push the boat out informal. to celebrate, esp lavishly and expensively
- rock the boat informal. to cause a disturbance in the existing situation
- intr to travel or go in a boat, esp as a form of recreation
- tr to transport or carry in a boat
Other Words From
- boata·ble adjective
- boatless adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of boat 1
Idioms and Phrases
The new recruits were all in the same boat.
He missed the boat when he applied too late to get into college.
I missed the boat on that explanation.
- rock the boat . rock 2 ( def 17 ) .
More idioms and phrases containing boat
Example sentences.
Players’ boats docked at Port Tampa Bay to continue the celebration.
Lobster boats rumble below Acadia’s cliffs as they move from buoy to buoy pulling traps.
The battle against “boat checks” shows how hard it is to weed out the expensive benefits written into police union contracts.
Lippe tested positive, followed by a Bethesda couple she had met on the boat.
That’s great if you sell lawnmowers or boat lifts and someone is searching for a specific type or brand of lawnmower or boat lift.
My captain on the boat, Brazakka, he wanted me to do this Hemingway bit, with the white stubble, and he wanted the hero angle.
The last time there was a raid of this scale was in 2001, when 52 men were arrested on Queen Boat, a floating disco on the Nile.
On Belgika, Botala and his family watched as the white men loaded their families into a large boat and took off for Kisangani.
Translators—many of whom came by boat themselves—work through the crowds with Italian authorities to take down names and details.
“When the smuggler boat is ready, they call you,” Saed says.
Hoosier hurried on board the boat, and followed Dick's instructions to the letter.
But, as the keel of the boats touched bottom, each boat-load dashed into the water and then into the enemy's fire.
The Comet started on her first trip up the Arkansas, being the first steam boat that ascended that river.
That he laughed at their folly, and went himself in the boat, ordering his men to take a strong cable along with them.
Many of them were wounded and the worst of these were put into a picket boat which had just that moment come along.
Related Words
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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Definition of 'sailing'
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sailing in American English
Sailing in british english, examples of 'sailing' in a sentence sailing, more idioms containing sailing, related word partners sailing, trends of sailing.
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Browse alphabetically sailing
- sailing boat
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Related terms of sailing
- land sailing
- plain sailing
- plane sailing
- rhumb sailing
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Definition of boat noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
COMMENTS
The meaning of SAILBOAT is a boat usually propelled by sail. we were stuck in the sailboat for an hour until the wind came up and we could move again
How to use sailing in a sentence. the technical skill of managing a ship : navigation; the method of determining the course to be followed to reach a given point… See the full definition
Sailboat definition: a boat having sails as its principal means of propulsion.. See examples of SAILBOAT used in a sentence.
The meaning of SAIL is an extent of fabric (such as canvas) by means of which wind is used to propel a ship through water. How to use sail in a sentence.
SAILBOAT definition: 1. a small boat with sails 2. a small boat with sails 3. a boat with one or more sails used to move…. Learn more.
Sailboat definition: A small boat propelled partially or wholly by sail. ... Dictionary Meanings; Sailboat Definition Sailboat Definition. sālbōt. sailboats ... Webster's New World. Similar definitions (slang) A playing card with the rank of four. Wiktionary. Synonyms:
A sailboat is a relatively small boat that uses wind power to propel it forward. When the wind is strong enough, sailboats can move very quickly. Ahoy!
Definition of sailboat noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more. ... Try it for free as part of the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary app. See sailboat in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Check pronunciation: sailboat. Other results All ...
Dictionary sailboat. Tweet. noun sail · boat \ ˈ sāl-ˌ bōt\: a boat that has a sail. Full Definition of SAILBOAT: a boat usually propelled by sail
A sailboat is the same as a →sailing boat. [mainly US].... Click for English pronunciations, examples sentences, video.
Define sailboat. sailboat synonyms, sailboat pronunciation, sailboat translation, English dictionary definition of sailboat. n. A small boat propelled partially or wholly by sail.
SAILBOAT meaning: 1. a small boat with sails 2. a small boat with sails 3. a boat with one or more sails used to move…. Learn more.
Sailing with the wind blowing to the aft, in line with the center-line of the vessel. Displacement. The displacement hull design displaces boat weight in the water and is only supported by its buoyancy. Displacement. The weight of the water displaced by the vessel is equal to the vessel's weight. Downhaul. The rope used to pull down the spar ...
Sailing definition: The skill required to operate and navigate a vessel; navigation.
Definition of sailboat noun in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more. ... Find out which words work together and produce more natural-sounding English with the Oxford Collocations Dictionary app. Try it for free as part of the Oxford Advanced Learner's ...
Definition of sailboat in the Definitions.net dictionary. Meaning of sailboat. What does sailboat mean? Information and translations of sailboat in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web. ... Webster Dictionary Rate this definition: 0.0 / 0 votes. Sailboat noun. a boat propelled by a sail or sails. Wikidata Rate this ...
The meaning of BOAT is a small vessel for travel on water. How to use boat in a sentence. a small vessel for travel on water; ship; a boat-shaped container, utensil, or device…
A sailboat is the same as a →sailing boat. [mainly US].... Click for pronunciations, examples sentences, video. TRANSLATOR. LANGUAGE. GAMES. ... Definition of 'sailboat' ... Download our English Dictionary apps - available for both iOS and Android. Read more.
Boat definition: a vessel for transport by water, constructed to provide buoyancy by excluding water and shaped to give stability and permit propulsion.. See examples of BOAT used in a sentence.
Sailboat explanation. Define Sailboat by Webster's Dictionary, WordNet Lexical Database, Dictionary of Computing, Legal Dictionary, Medical Dictionary, Dream Dictionary.
sailing. (seɪlɪŋ ) Word forms: sailings. 1. uncountable noun. Sailing is the activity or sport of sailing boats. There was swimming and sailing down on the lake. 2. countable noun. Sailings are trips made by a ship carrying passengers. Ferry companies are providing extra sailings from Calais.
Boat definition: A dish shaped like a boat. Dictionary ... Dictionary Meanings; Boat Definition Boat Definition. bōt. boated, boating, boats ... Webster's New World. Similar definitions. Any large, seagoing water vehicle; ship: a term in popular use, but not by sailors.
I pushed the boat out into the middle of the river. I took them in my boat. My brother took us all out in his new boat. Normally the boat is crewed by five people. Sit down, you're rocking the boat. The boat chugged out to sea. The boat headed upriver. The boat is propelled by a powerful outboard motor. The boat pitched violently from side to side.