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Steven W Johnson > Intel > Nautical Terms Training For The Landlubber

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Nautical Terms Training For The Landlubber

Some are obvious. Others are, well, archaic! Here are some of the tougher ones:

Abaft - toward the rear (stern) of the craft

Abeam - at right angles to the midline of the craft

Aloft - above the deck (generally in the rigging)

Beam - where the craft is widest

Bearing - the direction the craft is traveling

Bow - (rhymes with plough) - the front of the craft

Bridge - the spot where you steer or navigate the craft (sometimes more than 1)

Brightwork - varnished woodwork or polished brass or bronze

Bulkhead - a partition between compartments

Catamaran - a craft with two hulls

Cleat - hardware for tying off lines

Cuddy - a small shelter or cabin

Dinghy - a small row boat or tender, often used to get to shore

Draft - how far down in the water a craft sits

Fender - a foam or similar cushion for preventing damage dockside or tying up

Forepeak - a small compartment in the bow

Fouled - when equipment becomes snarled or tangled

Freeboard - how much distance between the water and the gunwhale

Galley - the craft's cooking facilities or kitchen

Gear - all the assorted lines, tackle, blocks and other rigging

Gunwhale - the topmost edges of the craft's deck

Hatch - a hole in the craft for passing gear, fitted with a hatchcover

Headway - the forward movement of the craft

Hull - the body of the craft - multihulls (catamarans, trimarans) have more than one

Keel - the bottom edge of the craft, running all the way from bow to stern

Lee - away from the wind

Leeward - in the direction pointing away from where the wind is blowing

Leeway - side slippage of the craft due to either wind or the current

Marlinspike - a nautical tool for assisting in splicing lines

Midships - the center of the ship

Piloting - to navigate the craft

Pitch - to bob up and down (as against to Yaw, which is side to side)

Port - the left side of the craft

Rudder - a plate of wood or metal, used for steering the craft

Running rigging - anything that "runs" through a block (lines)

Screw - the propeller of a power boat

Scuppers - holes in the deck for draining excess water

Slack - when lines are the opposite fast (tight)

Sounding - how deep the water is

Standing rigging - the lines that support the rest of the topside rigging (such as mast, boom)

Starboard - the right side of the craft

Stern - the rear of the craft

Stow - to stash away gear in the right place

Swamp - when the craft fills with water, but doesn't sink

Tiller - a piece of gear attached to the rudder - used to change course

Trim - how balanced the craft is in the water from fore to aft

Under Way - when the craft is in motion

Wake - a craft moving rapidly enough to create a disturbance in the water (to leave a wake)

Waterline - the line (often marked) where the water comes up to

Windward - towards where the wind is blowing from

Yaw - to swing from side to side (as opposed to pitch, which is up and down)

Contributed by Steven W Johnson on April 6, 2008, at 8:58 PM UTC.

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This intel was contributed by Steven W Johnson


Steven W Johnson

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