n
Alternative form of 420 [A particular type of monohull dinghy with two sails, designed for two people.]
n
A bark canoe used by the Africans.
n
Alternative form of baggala [A traditional two-masted sailing vessel, used in the Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf.]
n
Alternative form of bidarka [A kayak constructed by covering a light wooden frame (lashed together with sinew) in sea lion hides.]
n
Alternative spelling of balinger [(nautical, historical) A small medieval sea-going ship with oars and sails.]
n
(archaic) any small sailing vessel
n
Alternative form of batil [A type of traditional sailing vessel used in the Arabian Sea.]
n
Alternative form of batil [A type of traditional sailing vessel used in the Arabian Sea.]
n
(historical) A long red streamer hoisted by ships during the Middle Ages to indicate combat to the death.
n
Alternative form of bawley [(nautical) A small fishing boat, equipped with sails, used mainly in the estuary of the Thames, England.]
n
Alternative form of birlinn [(Scotland, historical) A type of boat used especially in the Hebrides and West Highlands of Scotland in the Middle Ages.]
n
(nautical) Bermuda sloop
n
(nautical) Alternative form of bilander [(nautical, historical) A small two-masted merchant vessel, fitted only for coasting, or for use in canals, as in Holland.]
adj
Having a boattail (narrowing rear end).
n
Obsolete form of budgerow. [(now historical) A large, slow-moving barge used in India.]
n
(now historical) A large, slow-moving barge used in India.
n
Alternative form of baggala [A traditional two-masted sailing vessel, used in the Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf.]
n
(nautical) A small boat used for carrying provisions to ships lying at anchor in a harbour.
n
A kind of large canoe used in the southern United States, Central America, and South America.
n
A herring buss, a type of shallow-keeled Dutch fishing boat used especially for herring fishing.
n
A traditional Peruvian boat made from reeds.
n
Alternative form of caïquejee [A person who rows a caique.]
n
Obsolete form of canoe (“type of boat”). [A small long and narrow boat, propelled by one or more people (depending on the size of canoe), using single-bladed paddles. The paddlers face in the direction of travel, in either a seated position, or kneeling on the bottom of the boat. Canoes are open on top, and pointed at both ends.]
n
A sailor who has sailed around Cape Horn.
n
(historical) An ancient small boat made of wickerwork covered with a hide or leather.
n
Alternative form of caracore [A light vessel or proa used by the people of Borneo, etc., and by the Dutch in the East Indies.]
n
Alternative form of caracore [A light vessel or proa used by the people of Borneo, etc., and by the Dutch in the East Indies.]
n
(historical) A high-pooped Turkish ship.
n
(obsolete) A raft of three pieces of wood lashed together, the middle piece being longer than the others, and serving as a keel on which the rower squats while paddling.
n
Obsolete spelling of catamaran [A twin-hulled ship or boat.]
n
A type of dugout canoe of South America.
n
A person who rows a caique.
n
Alternative form of sampan (“type of boat”) [A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars.]
n
Alternative form of sampan (“type of boat”) [A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars.]
n
Alternative form of shanty (sailor's song). [A roughly-built hut or cabin.]
n
(nautical) A narrow-sterned boat formerly much used in the Newfoundland fisheries.
n
A sailing ship of the 18th and 19th centuries engaged in the Old China Trade
n
(nautical) small flat-bottomed fishing boat suitable for launching from a beach, found on the north-east coast of England and in Scotland.
n
A boatman who uses a coracle.
n
A kind of boat of various forms, used in the Malay Archipelago.
n
A type of vessel, which was notably used in Denmark and Sweden
n
A light canoe employed by the Chonos, a nomadic indigenous people of southern Chile.
n
Alternative form of dghaisa [A small boat resembling a gondola, common in Malta.]
n
Alternative form of dhow (“sailing vessel”) [(nautical) A traditional sailing vessel used along the coasts of Arabia, East Africa, and the Indian Ocean, generally having a single mast and a lateen sail.]
n
(historical) An ancient kind of sailing ship originating from Java.
n
A two-masted fishing vessel, used by the Dutch.
n
Alternative form of dory (“the fish”) [(nautical) A small flat-bottomed boat with pointed or somewhat pointed ends, used for fishing both offshore and on rivers.]
n
(nautical) Alternative form of dory (“boat”) [(nautical) A small flat-bottomed boat with pointed or somewhat pointed ends, used for fishing both offshore and on rivers.]
n
Alternative form of dory (“spear”) [(nautical) A small flat-bottomed boat with pointed or somewhat pointed ends, used for fishing both offshore and on rivers.]
n
A beaked galley, or Viking warship.
n
Any small, slow craft, especially for transporting goods to or from shore.
n
A boat used for eeling (catching eels).
n
(nautical) A light, narrow rowing boat, especially one used in competitive rowing, steered by a cox, in which eight rowers each have two oars.
adj
Of or pertaining to activities that occur when a commercial fishing boat lands or unloads a catch.
n
(nautical) A small fishing boat that operated out of Fife in Scotland
n
A boat used for fishing.
n
A boat used for fishing.
n
A fishing boat, usually a relatively large one.
n
A flat-bottomed sloop-rigged sharpie.
n
A market where goods are sold from boats, chiefly found in Southeast and South Asia.
n
Alternative form of 49er (in various senses) [A class of two-handed double-trapeze dinghy (from its maximum length of 16 feet, approx. 4900 millimetres).]
n
Alternative form of gallivat [(nautical) A small armed vessel, with sails and oars, used on the Malabar coast.]
n
(historical) A Turkish sailor. [from 19th c.]
n
Alternative spelling of galliot [(nautical) A light galley.]
n
(Britain) A light, open boat used on the Thames by customhouse officers, press gangs, and also for pleasure.
n
(nautical) Alternative spelling of galleass [(nautical, historical) A type of rowable vessel of the 16th and 17th centuries, similar to a galley but larger, and normally equipped with sails.]
n
A type of fishing boat in the west of Ireland with a distinctive black hull and red sails.
n
A small boat used for sponge fishing.
n
(archaic) A small fishing vessel of the Persian Gulf.
n
A two- or three-masted vessel used on the Malabar coast.
n
A fishing boat used for catching haddock.
n
A boat used in fishing for herring.
n
(historical) A large merchantman ship in Ancient Greece.
n
Alternative spelling of ice boat [An ice yacht.]
n
A traditional wooden sailing raft of northern Brazil.
n
(nautical) A type of proa native to Palau
n
Alternative spelling of caique [(nautical) A small wooden trading vessel, brightly painted and rigged for sail, traditionally used for fishing and trawling.]
n
Alternative spelling of caique [(nautical) A small wooden trading vessel, brightly painted and rigged for sail, traditionally used for fishing and trawling.]
n
Alternative form of caique [(nautical) A small wooden trading vessel, brightly painted and rigged for sail, traditionally used for fishing and trawling.]
n
Alternative spelling of caique [(nautical) A small wooden trading vessel, brightly painted and rigged for sail, traditionally used for fishing and trawling.]
n
(historical) A navigation device, known to the Arabs and Chinese of the ancient world, consisting of a wooden card and knotted string.
n
Alternative spelling of caique [(nautical) A small wooden trading vessel, brightly painted and rigged for sail, traditionally used for fishing and trawling.]
n
(historical) One employed in managing a Newcastle keel, or coal boat.
n
(historical) A keeler; one who manages a coal boat.
n
A wooden offshore platform for fishermen found in Malaysia, Philippines, Indonesia, and Singapore.
n
A circular wooden vessel, made of hooped staves.
n
A trough-like vessel for holding water, made from stringybark by the Aboriginal Australians.
n
(Philippines) a boat-shaped lute
n
(nautical) A Philippine merchant ship
n
Alternative form of lakatoi [A double-hulled sailing watercraft of Papua New Guinea.]
n
A double-hulled sailing watercraft of Papua New Guinea.
n
(historical) A kind of sailing ship from Maritime Southeast Asia.
n
(slang, archaic) A British troopship.
n
A type of naval vessel made by the Vikings.
n
A traditional, brightly painted Maltese fishing boat.
n
A boat used for fishing mackerel
n
A large riverboat, formerly used as a naval vessel in Arabian countries.
n
(historical) A large Turkish ship. [from 16th c.]
n
A type of simple fishing vessel found on the coast of East Africa.
n
Alternative form of masoola boat [A masula.]
n
Alternative form of masula [A type of boat used on the Coromandel Coast of southeast India, typically for travelling between ships and shore. Also more fully masula boat.]
n
(informal, humorous) A unit of measure of beauty, corresponding to the amount of beauty required to launch one ship.
n
A dugout canoe, especially as used in the Okavango Swamps of Botswana.
n
Obsolete form of manchua (“type of boat”). [A kind of single-masted cargo boat.]
n
(Scotland) A skiff used for fishing.
n
A kind of megalithic chamber tomb, unique to the Balearic island of Minorca, with two vertical and two corbelled walls giving it the form of an upturned boat.
n
(Christianity) A thurible in the shape of a boat.
n
A toy consisting of a model boat and animals to put in it.
n
A kind of fishing boat on the Great Lakes of North America.
n
(archaic) Any of several large, ferocious sea creatures, now especially the killer whale.
n
A boat used for going out to catch oysters.
n
(India, now historical) A Bengalese four-oared passenger boat.
n
A type of modest-sized, open, outboard-powered, fishing boat common throughout much of the developing world, including Central America, the Caribbean, parts of Africa, the Middle East, and much of Asia.
n
(now historical) A boat-shaped receptacle for baby food.
n
Alternative form of patamar [(nautical) A sailing vessel resembling a grab, formerly used in the coasting trade of Bombay and Ceylon.]
n
Alternative form of patamar [(nautical) A sailing vessel resembling a grab, formerly used in the coasting trade of Bombay and Ceylon.]
n
Alternative form of patamar [(nautical) A sailing vessel resembling a grab, formerly used in the coasting trade of Bombay and Ceylon.]
n
A raft used to attract and catch fish in Southeast Asia, particularly in the Philippines.
n
(nautical) A small rowboat traditionally used for fishing and lobstering in Maine.
n
A boat used in pearl fishing.
n
Alternative form of penteconter [(historical, obsolete) A galley-type Grecian vessel with fifty oars.]
n
A fishing boat with identical bow and stern.
n
A small naval craft used for harbor patrol and other close inshore work.
n
A kind of boat, a chebacco.
n
(historical) A kind of fishing schooner of New England.
n
Alternative form of pirogue (“type of boat”) [A canoe of shallow draft, made by hollowing a log.]
n
A type of dugout canoe used in Central America
n
Alternative form of pulwar (“type of boat”) [A keelless riverboat used in northeast India and Bangladesh, chiefly to carry cargo.]
n
(Ireland) A kind of small fishing boat from the region of Galway in Ireland.
n
A long pole, normally with a hook, used to push barges upstream.
n
Alternative form of proa [A sailing vessel found in the waters of Micronesia and Indonesia; it has a single, large outrigger and a triangular sail.]
n
Alternative form of pram (flat-bottomed boat) [(UK, Australia, New Zealand) A small vehicle, usually covered, in which a newborn baby is pushed around in a lying position.]
n
Alternative form of pulwar (“type of boat”) [A keelless riverboat used in northeast India and Bangladesh, chiefly to carry cargo.]
n
Alternative form of pulwar (“type of boat”) [A keelless riverboat used in northeast India and Bangladesh, chiefly to carry cargo.]
n
An ancient English fishing boat.
n
Alternative form of lantaka [(historical, military) A kind of portable bronze cannon or swivel gun, sometimes mounted on merchant vessels and warships in Maritime Southeast Asia.]
n
A kind of ketch heavily used in the Black Sea, Tisa, Danube and Sava
n
Alternative form of sambuq [A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).]
n
Alternative form of sambuq [A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).]
n
An ancient type of ship-borne siege engine.
n
Alternative form of sambuq [A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).]
n
A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).
n
A small boat used to gather sand and bring it to shore for use in construction etc.
n
Alternative form of sampan [A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars.]
n
(naval slang) A meal of roast beef served on a bed of potatoes.
n
(Britain, colloquial, archaic) A herring.
n
a ship used for hunting seals.
n
A fishing vessel used for seining.
n
Alternative form of shanty (“sailor's work song”) [A roughly-built hut or cabin.]
n
(US) A long, narrow fishing boat used in shallow waters.
n
(India, obsolete) A kind of coasting vessel, sometimes described as a great patamar.
n
Alternative form of shibar [(India, obsolete) A kind of coasting vessel, sometimes described as a great patamar.]
n
(historical) A shooting-boat used in the Kashmir lakes.
n
A boat used for shrimp fishing.
n
A six-oared boat of the Shetland Islands.
n
Alternative form of sixareen [A six-oared boat of the Shetland Islands.]
n
(nautical, fishing) A Norwegian fishing boat classification, for boats around 10 metres in length, between 25 and 40 feet, and with a particular hull style, used in northern Norway.
n
A boat intended for sportfishing.
n
(nautical, slang) A motorboat.
n
Alternative form of sambuq [A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).]
n
A kind of outrigger canoe used in Fiji.
n
A type of one-masted lateen-sailed vessel used in the Mediterranean.
n
(Australia, slang) A small open aluminium boat.
n
An object towed behind a vessel in the water, carrying sonar equipment.
n
A type of small colourful boat maneuverered with a pole
n
A Greek small, double-ended watercraft, chiefly used for fishing.
n
An engine-powered fishing boat, used for moving slowly while fishing lines drag behind, sometimes able to sail in shallow water.
n
(nautical) A large, open boat made of skins stretched over a wooden frame that is propelled by paddles; used by the Eskimos for transportation.
n
(UK, dialect, Cornwall) A smaller boat that follows the main fishing boat.
n
(nautical) A fishing vessel designed to carry live fish in a tank or well.
n
(countable, historical) A flat-bottomed vessel once employed by British merchants, notably in East Anglia, sometimes converted into pleasure boats.
n
(slang, dated, US) The USS Monitor, USS Montauk and similar American Civil War-era ironclad ships.
n
A clinker-built small boat used traditionally in Shetland.
n
Alternative form of sambuq [A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).]
n
Alternative form of sambuq [A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).]
n
Alternative form of sambuq [A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).]
n
Alternative form of sambuq [A type of dhow (a small Arabian boat).]
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