A sailing ship, such as a schooner, with a fore-and-aft rig.
A light fast-sailing ship, in early use especially for the conveyance of royal or other important persons.
Other themed rooms include a newly opened Trojan Horse, a Troll Forest, a South Seas sailing ship and a Wine Room.
a metal stand that formerly held cannon balls on sailing ships.
It was just over 32 metres in length. It was not a fast sailing ship, but was strongly built.
A sailing ship with from three to five masts of which only the foremast is square-rigged, the others being fore-and-aft rigged.
The third mast aft on sailing ships carrying three or more masts.
Nautical To turn a sailing ship so that its bow heads into the wind and the ship lies motionless except for drifting, in order to meet a storm.
When fitted with an otter trawl, invented in 1892, it enabled fishermen to haul in six times the catch of a sailing ship.
The deck of the sailing ship was made of thick planks.
Is this grassland? I lay in front of the window of the cross-country jeep and stared at the green ocean in front of me as if I were on a sailing ship breaking through the wind and waves.
The modern sailing ship was developed by a man who never went to sea. He was Prince Henry of Portugal, the younger son of the Portuguese king.
a small horizontal rope between the shrouds of a sailing ship; they form a ladder for climbing aloft.
A rig on a sailing ship that has quadrilateral and triangular sails set to the fore-and-aft line and that can be trimmed to leeward.
One day, a sailing ship sank to the bottom of the sea with all its passengers.
The second mast aft of a sailing ship with three or more masts.