n
A particular type of monohull dinghy with two sails, designed for two people.
n
A monohull dinghy, 4.7 metres in length, with two sails, designed for two people
n
A class of two-handed double-trapeze dinghy (from its maximum length of 16 feet, approx. 4900 millimetres).
n
a wooden boat used as a ferry in Dubai
n
A swift boat used to carry messages; a dispatch boat.
n
A boat used in Calicut (modern Kozhikode) in India, about eighty feet long and six or seven feet wide.
n
A spacious type of boat with a flat bottom.
n
A broad, flat-bottomed ferryboat, usually worked by a rope.
n
A traditional two-masted sailing vessel, used in the Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf.
n
A type of wooden watercraft used by a group of Austronesian people when they migrated to the Philippines.
n
A large boat, about 18 meters in length, used by Malay settlers of the Philippines in prehispanic times. Such a vessel would carry a small clan or a large family.
n
(nautical, historical) A small medieval sea-going ship with oars and sails.
n
A fast-sailing schooner, used in the Bermudas and West Indies.
n
A raft or float, used principally on the Pacific coast of South America.
n
(US, slang) The group of NBA players Carmelo Anthony, LeBron James, Chris Paul and Dwyane Wade.
n
(Philippines) a canoe; an outrigger canoe or dugout
n
(historical) A kind of high-sterned dhow used in the Arab world.
n
A richly decorated ceremonial state vessel propelled by rowers for river processions.
n
A type of quant pole used to propel a barge through the water
n
(historical) A type of flat-bottomed freighter used on the Nile in Ancient Egypt, powered either by sail, or by being towed by a downstream raft driven by the current, while dragging a stone anchor to keep the course steady.
n
(sailing) Alternative spelling of barquentine [(nautical) A sailing vessel similar to a barque, but fore-and-aft (schooner) rigged on the mainmast]
n
(sailing) Alternative spelling of barquentine [(nautical) A sailing vessel similar to a barque, but fore-and-aft (schooner) rigged on the mainmast]
n
(poetic) a sailing vessel or boat of any kind
n
(nautical) A sailing vessel similar to a barque, but fore-and-aft (schooner) rigged on the mainmast
n
A kind of small sailboat.
n
Alternative form of bass boat [A small boat, usually made from aluminum or fiberglass and propelled by two motors, designed and equipped primarily for fishing for bass or other panfish.]
n
A small, flat-bottomed type of boat.
n
A type of traditional sailing vessel used in the Arabian Sea.
n
Alternative form of bateau [A small, flat-bottomed type of boat.]
n
(nautical) A small fishing boat, equipped with sails, used mainly in the estuary of the Thames, England.
n
(nautical) A small flat-bottomed craft, used principally on the rivers, canals, and roadsteads of France.
n
Synonym of float tube (“small inflatable fishing craft”)
n
Alternative form of belly boat [Synonym of float tube (“small inflatable fishing craft”)]
n
(historical) A type of large disposable ship that was used for timber-rafting along the rivers Volga and Kama from the end of the 16th century until the middle of the 20th century.
n
A kayak constructed by covering a light wooden frame (lashed together with sinew) in sea lion hides.
n
(nautical, historical) A small two-masted merchant vessel, fitted only for coasting, or for use in canals, as in Holland.
n
(UK) A flat-bottomed river barge or coasting vessel.
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
(Scotland, historical) A type of boat used especially in the Hebrides and West Highlands of Scotland in the Middle Ages.
n
A kind of compact land yacht.
n
(nautical, obsolete) On Sulawesi: a hollowed-out tree trunk used as a boat.
n
A vehicle, utensil, or dish somewhat resembling a boat in shape.
n
An area on land where small boats can be stored when not in use.
n
An ethnic group that principally lives on fishing and houseboats, particularly the Tanka or Dan people of East Asia.
n
(nautical) A ship, normally moored alongside a quay, used as a hotel
n
(childish, or endearing) A boat.
n
A boat that operates as a bookmobile.
n
The jargon used by boating enthusiasts.
n
a floating hotel; a boat that acts as a hotel
n
(nautical) A Flemish sloop with a castle at each end.
n
(nautical) Synonym of flatboat
n
A Venetian barge modelled on the state barge (called Bucentaur) used annually on Ascension Day in the ancient ceremony of the marriage of the state with the Adriatic.
n
(nautical) A sailboat once used for oystering out of Chesapeake Bay
n
A type of surf boat used in India.
n
A surf boat in use at Mumbai and along the Malabar coast.
n
A large sailboat once used in Mexico.
n
A small, soft-floored inflatable boat (designed for use by one or two people).
n
Obsolete form of bilander. [(nautical, historical) A small two-masted merchant vessel, fitted only for coasting, or for use in canals, as in Holland.]
n
Alternative spelling of caique [(nautical) A small wooden trading vessel, brightly painted and rigged for sail, traditionally used for fishing and trawling.]
n
(nautical) A small wooden trading vessel, brightly painted and rigged for sail, traditionally used for fishing and trawling.
n
(obsolete) A swift rowing boat used in the Indian Archipelago.
n
(gambling) Any of the deflectors positioned around a roulette wheel, shaped like upside-down boats.
n
A practitioner of canoe camping.
n
Obsolete form of canoe. [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
Alternative form of carrack [(historical) A large European sailing vessel of the 14th to 17th centuries similar to a caravel but square-rigged on the foremast and mainmast and lateen-rigged on the mizzenmast.]
n
Obsolete spelling of caravel [(nautical, historical) A light, usually lateen-rigged sailing ship used by the Portuguese and Spanish for about 300 years from the 15th century, first for trade and later for voyages of exploration.]
n
Alternative spelling of caravel [(nautical, historical) A light, usually lateen-rigged sailing ship used by the Portuguese and Spanish for about 300 years from the 15th century, first for trade and later for voyages of exploration.]
n
(historical) A large European sailing vessel of the 14th to 17th centuries similar to a caravel but square-rigged on the foremast and mainmast and lateen-rigged on the mizzenmast.
n
(informal) A Catalina flying boat.
n
A twin-hulled ship or boat.
n
A long raft with two pontoons, capable of carrying more than one person.
n
A sort of canoe or kayak.
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 sampan (“type of boat”) [A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars.]
n
(historical, nautical) a Byzantine bireme used primarily for cargo transport
n
(in China) A licensed lighter employed in the transportation of goods to and from vessels.
n
A homemade Cuban boat, built to carry emigrants to the USA, and often abandoned upon arrival.
n
a go-fast boat, a powerboat of the type similar to what is used to smuggle cigarettes
n
a small, fast boat designed with a long narrow platform and a planing hull to enable it to reach high speeds.
n
(historical) A type of small steamboat that provided a vital supply link around the west coast and Hebrides islands of Scotland.
n
Alternative form of cockboat [(nautical) A small rowing boat, especially one pulled behind a larger ship, or used to ferry goods between a ship and the shore.]
n
(nautical) A small rowing boat, especially one pulled behind a larger ship, or used to ferry goods between a ship and the shore.
n
Alternative form of cockboat [(nautical) A small rowing boat, especially one pulled behind a larger ship, or used to ferry goods between a ship and the shore.]
n
(historical) A ship of burden, or war with a round, bulky hull.
n
A kind of boat that can be collapsed for greater portability.
n
(historical, nautical) A two-masted merchant ship of Ancient Rome.
n
A small, crudely-formed boat.
n
(India, historical) A fast-sailing vessel, with two masts and lateen sails, employed on the Malabar coast.
n
(Australia) A type of fishing boat used in Victoria, Australia, until the 1950s, latterly reinvented as a recreational sailboat.
n
(nautical) A boat, used in competitive rowing, having four rowers, each with a single oar
n
A slow unwieldy trading vessel.
n
Alternative spelling of currach [(nautical) An Irish boat, constructed like a coracle, and originally the same shape; now a boat of similar construction but conventional shape and large enough to be operated by up to eight oars.]
n
a dugout canoe used by indigenous people in South America
n
(nautical) An Irish boat, constructed like a coracle, and originally the same shape; now a boat of similar construction but conventional shape and large enough to be operated by up to eight oars.
n
A heavy-duty motor boat for official use.
n
A shallow boat designed to maximise deck space.
n
A small boat resembling a gondola, common in Malta.
n
A handcrafted sailboat with a motor or lateen sails, resembling a dhow, that is used in the Maldives.
n
(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
Alternative spelling of dinghy [(nautical) A small open boat, propelled by oars or paddles, carried as a tender, lifeboat, or pleasure craft on a ship.]
n
(nautical) A small open boat, propelled by oars or paddles, carried as a tender, lifeboat, or pleasure craft on a ship.
n
(historical) In early societies, a boat, canoe, etc., in which community members suffering from a disease were exiled in the belief that the evil spirits of the disease would be carried away.
n
A boat race in which the crews are composed of a number of pairs, usually of men and women.
n
(nautical) A light, narrow rowing boat, especially one used in competitive rowing, in which two rowers each have two oars
n
(US, Vietnam War, slang) A river craft outfitted with a high-pressure water cannon capable of destroying enemy encampments.
n
A powerboat or motorboat used for drag racing, particularly a purpose-built one.
n
Alternative form of drag boat [A powerboat or motorboat used for drag racing, particularly a purpose-built one.]
n
Alternative form of drag boat [A powerboat or motorboat used for drag racing, particularly a purpose-built one.]
n
A type of boat raced in Chinese festivals featuring a dragon motif and twenty paddling, one drumming, and one steering known as the sweep.
n
Alternative spelling of dugout [(nautical) A canoe made from a hollowed-out log.]
n
(nautical) A canoe made from a hollowed-out log.
n
(nautical) A canoe made by digging out the centre of a tree trunk.
n
(nautical) The hull of a barge, in tow of a tug, used for the carriage of cargo
n
(historical) Any German fast attack craft in World War Two.
n
A kind of collapsible canoe.
n
A traditional wooden shallow-draught sailing boat used in the Mediterranean and along the Nile in Egypt, its rig consisting of one or two lateen sails.
n
A type of boat or ship with a hull constructed of a steel frame covered with a sand and cement plaster.
n
Alternative form of ferryboat [(nautical) A boat used to ferry passengers, vehicles, or goods across open water, especially one that runs to a regular schedule]
n
Alternative form of fisher-boat [A boat used for fishing.]
n
A flat-bottomed boat, without keel, and of small draught.
n
A boxy, flat-bottomed boat used for carrying livestock, freight, and people on rivers.
n
Someone who travels by, or sells goods from, a flatboat.
n
A kind of flyboat; a storeship.
n
Alternative form of flyboat [A large flat-bottomed Dutch coasting vessel.]
n
A large flat-bottomed Dutch coasting vessel.
n
(nautical folklore) A mythical Dutch-flagged ghost clipper that is very fast sailing, and never makes it to port, seen on the high seas, where upon being hailed, occupants request information on persons long dead, or leave messages for said people. In European naval folklore, it was considered to portend bad luck.
n
Alternative spelling of foldboat [(kayaking) A type of collapsible canoe]
n
Alternative spelling of foldboat [(kayaking) A type of collapsible canoe]
n
A small, affordable sailboat, rigged as a sloop.
n
(nautical) A dinghy or similar small boat attached to a barge
n
(nautical) A Venetian vessel with a square stern, having only a mainmast, jigger mast, and bowsprit; also a sloop of war ship-rigged.
n
(Britain) A narrow clinker-built boat for sculling.
n
(nautical, historical) A type of small galley.
n
(Scotland) A lighter, or vessel for inland navigation.
n
A kind of Egyptian cargo boat.
n
Alternative form 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
Alternative form of gallivat [(nautical) A small armed vessel, with sails and oars, used on the Malabar coast.]
n
(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
Alternative form of gallivat [(nautical) A small armed vessel, with sails and oars, used on the Malabar coast.]
n
(nautical, historical) A long, slender ship propelled primarily by oars, whether having masts and sails or not; usually referring to rowed warships used in the Mediterranean from the 16th century until the modern era.
n
(nautical) A small armed vessel, with sails and oars, used on the Malabar coast.
n
(nautical) A type of boat which was originally flat-bottomed, reminiscent of a sled, and historically sailed around New Jersey.
n
A small flat-bottomed boat having a panel of glass at the bottom surrounded by seating so that passengers can view sea life.
n
A small, fast boat designed with a long, narrow platform and a planing hull to enable it to reach high speeds.
n
Obsolete form of gondola. [A small long, narrow boat with a high prow and stern, propelled with a single oar, especially in Venice.]
n
A small long, narrow boat with a high prow and stern, propelled with a single oar, especially in Venice.
n
Alternative form of goelette [A schooner.]
n
(nautical) A small two-masted vessel during the Age of Sail, typically carrying 12 guns, comprising two long guns in the chase position and ten carronades on the broadsides.
n
(nautical) Any of the various types of small armed vessels.
n
A flat-bottomed cargo vessel once common in Maine and New England rivers.
n
A fishing vessel/marine craft that is for-hire on a per person basis. A Head Boat or "Charter" are vessels issued a Certificate of Inspection (COI) issued by the U.S. Coast Guard to carry greater than six passengers-for-hire for the purposes of engaging in recreational fishing.
n
(historical) A type of shallow-draft boat used in amphibious landings, chiefly in World War Two.
n
(nautical) A vessel that transports lavatory waste.
n
(historical) A kind of sampan with a small wooden house in the middle, used by foreigners at Canton.
n
A vessel, such as a barge, used as a dwelling.
n
A small boat used on the coast.
n
A barge that uses hovercraft technology, suitable for transporting goods over swampy surfaces.
n
(nautical) A small coaster vessel, usually sloop-rigged, used in conveying passengers and goods, or as a tender to larger vessels in port.
n
a flat-bottomed boat with a very shallow draft, whose bow and stern are both squared off
n
A type of ship's boat of the 17th to 19th centuries, used mainly to ferry personnel to and from the ship.
n
Alternative form of jolly boat [A type of ship's boat of the 17th to 19th centuries, used mainly to ferry personnel to and from the ship.]
n
Obsolete spelling of kayak [A type of small boat, covered over by a surface deck, powered by the occupant or occupants using a double-bladed paddle in a sitting position, from a hole in the surface deck]
n
A type of modern long-keeled sailing boat.
n
(sailing) A small sailboat lacking a bowsprit, of a type found primarily in the Massachusetts area
n
A two-masted Dutch vessel.
n
Obsolete spelling of kayak [A type of small boat, covered over by a surface deck, powered by the occupant or occupants using a double-bladed paddle in a sitting position, from a hole in the surface deck]
n
Alternative form of lancang [(historical) A kind of sailing ship from Maritime Southeast Asia.]
n
Alternative form of lancaran (“ship”) [(historical) A kind of sailing ship used in Maritime Southeast Asia, propelled by oars and sails with two quarter rudders, one on either side of the stern.]
n
(colloquial) A long, heavy, luxurious automobile, providing a comfortable ride but poor handling characteristics.
n
Alternative spelling of land yacht [A vehicle used in land sailing, consisting of little more than of a carriage and a sail.]
n
(countable) A boat built in this style.
n
A traditional fishing boat of southwest England.
n
A flat-bottomed boat for carrying heavy loads across short distances (especially for canals or for loading or unloading larger boats).
n
A boat used for catching lobsters.
n
(historical, rare) A kind of boat in use in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, possibly a pilot boat.
n
(nautical) A dugout canoe
n
Alternative spelling of longtail boat [A type of watercraft native to Southeast Asia, which uses a common automotive engine as a powerplant; there is much variation among them, and in rural areas they may be improvised from bamboo and traditional materials with the sole defining characteristic being a secondhand car or truck engine.]
n
(nautical) Among the boats carried by a ship the largest, thus the most capable of boats carried on a ship.
n
A type of watercraft native to Southeast Asia, which uses a common automotive engine as a powerplant; there is much variation among them, and in rural areas they may be improvised from bamboo and traditional materials with the sole defining characteristic being a secondhand car or truck engine.
n
(nautical) A kind of light vessel used on the coast of China, having the hull built on a European model, and the rigging like that of a Chinese junk.
n
A small vessel having two or three masts, and a running bowsprit, and carrying lugsails.
n
A flat-bottomed cargo boat; mackinaw boat.
n
(historical) A flat-bottomed cargo boat, resembling a canoe, often schooner-rigged, formerly used on the Great Lakes and the Missouri River (to a lesser extent, elsewhere).
n
A cargo boat, with a large flat bottom and sharp ends, formerly used on the Great Lakes and the Missouri River (to a lesser extent, elsewhere).
n
a boat used to transport mail
n
A kind of single-masted cargo boat.
n
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
a class of racing sailing yacht that pushes at the upper limits of the International Offshore Rule of regulated sail yacht racing, having a waterline length in excess of 70-feet.
n
The LCM-8, a river boat and mechanized landing craft used by the US Navy and Army during the Vietnam War and subsequent operations.
n
(historical) A small trading vessel of the sixteenth century.
n
(UK, slang) A long, narrow kind of half-decked canal boat.
n
A boat that has a single hull.
n
(sailing) A sailboat designed to be crewed or raced by a single person.
n
A canoe or boat made from a single piece of timber.
n
A large flatboat used in the West Indies for taking freight from shore to ship.
n
(nautical) A flat barge used for transporting mud from a dredger
n
Alternative form of mud scow [(nautical) A flat barge used for transporting mud from a dredger]
n
A boat for carrying away the mud dredged from a river, etc.
n
a hull, or vessel having this construction
n
(obsolete) A small boat.
n
A barge used on the narrow canals of England.
n
(historical) A boat used to relay news from one place to another.
n
(historical) An Arab sailing boat used for trading and transporting supplies.
n
An Indian boat for transporting freight.
n
(nautical) A small centre-board sailing dinghy designed to train and introduce young children into sailing.
n
(nautical) A vessel used to transport iron ore on the Great Lakes
n
A seagoing canoe having one or more lateral support floats to provide stability.
n
(historical) A boat specifically designed to provide transportation to passengers on a regular schedule up and down a river or canal.
n
River or canal boat that carries mail.
n
Alternative form of packet boat [(historical) An ocean-going ship chartered by the government to carry the mail and official communications.]
n
A single-bladed version is typically used on canoes and some other small boats.
n
Alternative spelling of paddleboat [(nautical) A boat propelled by a paddle wheel]
n
(nautical) An enclosed structure around a paddlewheel.
n
(nautical) A boat propelled by a paddle wheel
n
A small inflatable motorboat used in Latin America.
n
A traditional single-outrigger canoe of Tuvalu.
n
(zoology, obsolete) A large spiral East Indian marine shell (Turbinella rapa), once used by native priests to hold the oil for anointing.
n
Alternative form of pap boat [(now historical) A boat-shaped receptacle for baby food.]
n
Alternative form of proa (“sailing vessel”) [A sailing vessel found in the waters of Micronesia and Indonesia; it has a single, large outrigger and a triangular sail.]
n
A boat that can be hired for sportfishing by a group of passengers.
n
Alternative form of party boat [A boat that can be hired for sportfishing by a group of passengers.]
n
A dispatch-boat; a small vessel used to communicate between the vessels of a fleet.
n
A large flat-bottomed trading boat peculiar to the river Ganges in India.
n
A relatively small naval vessel designed for coastal defence.
n
Alternative spelling of patrol boat [A relatively small naval vessel designed for coastal defence.]
n
Alternative form of panchway [(India, now historical) A Bengalese four-oared passenger boat.]
n
(UK, nautical) A small boat propelled by pedals that directly turn external paddles, used for recreation.
n
An engine-powered steel ship or vessel, larger than 15 meters, used for inland water transportation, and often modified in order to act as a docked restaurant or hotel.
n
(historical, obsolete) A galley-type Grecian vessel with fifty oars.
n
Alternative form of proa (“sailing vessel”) [A sailing vessel found in the waters of Micronesia and Indonesia; it has a single, large outrigger and a triangular sail.]
n
(by extension) Any small boat.
n
Alternative form of pirogue (a kind of boat) [A canoe of shallow draft, made by hollowing a log.]
n
Alternative form of pirogue [A canoe of shallow draft, made by hollowing a log.]
n
Alternative form of picket boat [A small naval craft used for harbor patrol and other close inshore work.]
n
(slang, archaic) submarine
n
A kind of boat used to transport pilots between land and the inbound or outbound ships that they are piloting.
n
A yacht or other small vessel which has a wheelhouse.
n
(now obsolete) A narrow boat.
n
(nautical) A light boat, traditionally propelled by sails, but sometimes a rowboat. Pinnaces are usually messenger boats, carrying messages among the larger ships of a fleet.
n
A small flat-bottom boat of shallow draft.
n
Alternative form of pleyt [(nautical, dated) A riverboat.]
n
A boat used for recreational activities, such as sport fishing or touring. [from 17th c.]
n
A boat used for recreational activities, such as sport fishing or touring.
n
Alternative spelling of pleasure craft [A boat used for recreational activities, such as sport fishing or touring.]
n
(nautical, dated) A riverboat.
n
(US) A barge; a kind of boat propelled by the use of a pole.
n
(nautical) Any small boat, such as a punt, propelled using a long pole.
n
A very large galley with more than five rows of oars on each side.
n
Alternative form of pontoon. [A flat-bottomed boat or other floating structure used as a buoyant support for a temporary bridge, dock or landing stage.]
n
A flat-bottomed boat or other floating structure used as a buoyant support for a temporary bridge, dock or landing stage.
n
A type of dinghy with a flat bow.
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 proa [A sailing vessel found in the waters of Micronesia and Indonesia; it has a single, large outrigger and a triangular sail.]
n
A sailing vessel found in the waters of Micronesia and Indonesia; it has a single, large outrigger and a triangular sail.
n
A keelless riverboat used in northeast India and Bangladesh, chiefly to carry cargo.
n
A small sloop or shallop, or a large boat with sails.
n
(India) A large boat for transporting produce.
n
A flat-bottomed boat used on the Ganges.
n
(nautical, historical) A vessel with 40 rows of oars.
n
(historical, nautical, archaic) A galley with four banks of oars, one above the other
n
(historical, nautical) a galley with four banks of oars, each rowed by two oarsmen.
n
(nautical) A light, narrow rowing boat, especially one used in competitive rowing, in which a four rowers each have two oars
n
(historical) An ancient Carthaginian or Greek galley having three banks of oars, rowed by five oarsmen: two to an oar in each of the upper rows, and one to the lower oar.
n
(acronym) Rigid inflatable boat — A lightweight inflatable boat with a rigid hull.
n
A watercraft designed for operating on rivers.
n
A traditional style of painted decoration applied to British narrowboats, typically incorporating brightly coloured flowers and scenes of castles set within rural landscapes.
n
(Britain, nautical) Alternative form of rowboat [(US) A small open boat propelled by oars (by rowing).]
n
(chiefly Visayas, Mindanao) A small wooden trimaran used as a transport and fishing boat in the Philippines.
n
Alternative spelling of sakia [A water wheel, traditionally drawn by a draft animal, but now with a motor. It is about 2-5 meters in diameter.]
n
A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars.
n
A long narrow boat used on the Barbary coast.
n
Alternative spelling of sauceboat [Synonym of gravy boat]
n
(historical) A long, low war galley used by the Neapolitans and Sicilians in the early part of the 19th century.
n
A flat-bottomed Dutch river-boat; a barge.
n
Alternative form of schuit [A flat-bottomed Dutch river-boat; a barge.]
n
A large flat-bottomed boat, having broad, square ends.
n
A small rowing boat, for one person.
n
(India, nautical) A type of small wooden boat
n
a utility boat carried by a larger vessel
n
(UK, dialect) A light flat-bottomed boat used in duck-shooting.
n
A type of Native American canoe.
n
(US) A river steamboat having a resident theatre.
n
Alternative form of shrimp boat [A boat used for shrimp fishing.]
n
(nautical) A light, narrow rowing boat, especially one used in competitive rowing, in which a single rower has two oars
n
A small flat-bottomed open boat with a pointed bow and square stern.
n
A shallow sailboat with a rectilinear or V-shaped cross section.
n
Alternative form of schuit [A flat-bottomed Dutch river-boat; a barge.]
n
A small boat that can be sailed, rowed, poled or sculled, predominantly associated with Barnegat Bay in New Jersey.
n
(obsolete) a large wooden vessel for carrying water, especially one to be carried on a pole between two people.
n
(archaeology, Egyptology) A wooden burial boat intended to be used by a king to make celestial journeys in the afterlife.
n
A fast boat, usually small (for 1-8 people).
n
A boat sent to make discoveries and bring intelligence.
n
(historical) A steam-powered excavator used in making docks, canals, etc.
n
A kind of sled for moving heavy objects.
n
A Russian river craft used for transporting freight.
n
A type of very large sailing yacht, typically used for racing, having a waterline length greater than 90 feet.
n
A novelty swan-shaped boat, associated with tourism and couples/lovers.
n
A small, shallow draft water vessel used by the United States navy for counterinsurgency (COIN) operations during the Vietnam War; Fast Patrol Craft (PCF).
n
(nautical) A barge with a square overhanging bow
n
A kind of boat used in Guangdong, about 25 feet long and often rowed by Tanka women; junk.
n
Type of boat used by the boat people near Canton.
n
(historical) A state barge fitted with cabins, on the Nile
n
(historical) An old Dutch sailing barge with a round bow, leeboards and a gaff-rigged mast.
n
A planked boat used by the Chumash and Tongva peoples of California since pre-Columbian times, propelled by crouching occupants using paddles.
n
(nautical, historical) A kind of light wooden boat used in the early 19th century to carry goods along rivers in Maritime Southeast Asia.
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A single-handed dinghy, 11 foot (3.6 metres) in length, with only one sail.
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A vessel constructed for being towed, such as a canal boat.
n
(dated) Alternative form of trekschuit. [A horse-drawn canal boat or riverboat, used to carry goods or passengers in the Netherlands.]
n
Alternative form of trekschuit [A horse-drawn canal boat or riverboat, used to carry goods or passengers in the Netherlands.]
n
Alternative spelling of trekschuit. [A horse-drawn canal boat or riverboat, used to carry goods or passengers in the Netherlands.]
n
Obsolete form of trekschuit. [A horse-drawn canal boat or riverboat, used to carry goods or passengers in the Netherlands.]
n
A horse-drawn canal boat or riverboat, used to carry goods or passengers in the Netherlands.
n
A type of boat with three parallel hulls.
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A type of boat with three parallel pontoons.
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A type of ship once used on the Danube.
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Alternative form of tugboat [A small, powerful boat used to push or pull barges or to help maneuver larger vessels.]
n
Alternative form of tugboat [A small, powerful boat used to push or pull barges or to help maneuver larger vessels.]
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A small, powerful boat used to push or pull barges or to help maneuver larger vessels.
n
(nautical, historical) A kind of single-masted traditional boat with a junk rig, formerly used on the Singapore River along with the tongkang.
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A traditional proa-style outrigger canoe of the Caroline Islands.
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A boat carried in the waist of a vessel.
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A boat carrying water in bulk to supply ships.
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Alternative spelling of water bus [A boat that operates like a bus, as a means of public transport.]
n
Alternative form of well-boat [(nautical) A fishing vessel designed to carry live fish in a tank or well.]
n
A boat resembling this and carried on a warship or other ship.
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A small two-masted, and later three-masted, Mediterranean transport ship with an overhanging bow and stern.
n
(nautical) Alternative form of xebec [A small two-masted, and later three-masted, Mediterranean transport ship with an overhanging bow and stern.]
n
Alternative form of yawl [A small ship's boat, usually rowed by four or six oars.]
n
A small ship's boat, usually rowed by four or six oars.
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A type of two-man keelboat from Norway.
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A small sailing vessel used off the coasts of Spain and Portugal.
n
(nautical) Alternative form of xebec [A small two-masted, and later three-masted, Mediterranean transport ship with an overhanging bow and stern.]
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