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Nautical Glossary
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B [ Bravo ]
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(am or pm)1 12:30 04:30 08:30 2 01:00 05:00 09:00 3 01:30 05:30 09:30 4 02:00 06:00 10:00 5 02:30 06:30 10:30 6 03:00 07:00 11:00 7 03:30 07:30 11:30 8 04:00 08:00 12:00
- Below - Beneath the decks, i.e., inside a cabin or in a hold
- Bend - [Knots] - A type of knot used to connect a line to a spar or another line, a sail to a spar, or a line to a sail. Also the act of using such a knot. (2) To swing your body when pulling on an oar - "bend to your oars".
- Bend on Sails - To install the sails on the boom or the forestay.
- Beneaped - A situation where a vessel has gone aground at the top of the spring tides and has to wait for up to a fortnight (during which the neap tides occur) for the next tide high enough to float her off. Vessels beneaped at around the time of the equinoxes when the highest spring tides occur may have to wait up to 6 months to get off.
- Bent on a Splice - Sailor's term for being about to get married, a splice being used to join two ropes together.
- Bergy Bits - Pieces of ice, about the size of a small house, that have broken off a glacier.
- Bermuda Rig - A sail plan in which the main and/or mizzen, or the foresail of a schooner, is of triangular shape, very long in the luff and set from a tall mast. This is almost now universal in all sailing yachts.
- Berth - (1) A place for a person to sleep. (2) A place where the ship can tie up or anchor. (3) A position of employment aboard a ship (4) A safe and cautious Distance from which another vessel or object is passed, as in "giving wide berth"
- Beset - Said of a vessel when she is entirely surrounded by ice.
- Best Bower - Term used in the days of sail to indicate the starboard of the two anchors carried at the bow of a ship. The anchor on the port side was known as the small bower (although they were the same size).
- Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea - see Devil
- Betwixt Wind and Water - On or near the line of immersion of a ship's hull.
- Bewpars, Bewpers - Old name for bunting from which signal and other flags were made.
- Bibbs - Pieces of timber bolted to the hounds of a mast of a square rigged ship to support the trestle trees.
- Bible - see Holystone
- Bight - (1) The part of a line between the ends. (2) A loop in a line. (3) An indentation in the coastline lying between two promontories, larger than a bay.
- Bilboes - Long bars or bolts with a padlock on the end, on which iron shackles could slide, which were used on board ship to confine the legs of prisoners.
- Bilge - The part of the floors of a ship on either side of the keel which approaches closer to a horizontal rather than vertical direction. The very lowest part of a boats interior where water is likely to collect.
- Bilge Boards - When a boat has two separate fins, instead of a centerboard or keel, they are referred to as bilge boards.
- Bilge Keels - Shallow keels, usually placed in conjunction with or in place of a center keel. Attached to each side of a vessel, they provide lateral resistance and stability, as well as support the weight of the hull of the ship on the ways when launching, or when in dry-dock for cleaning or repairs.
- Bilge Pump - A mechanical, electrical, or manually operated pump used to remove water from the bilge.
- Bilge Water - Water which runs down and collects in the bilges of a ship and usually becomes foul and noxious.
- Bill of Health - A certificate authenticated by a recognized port authority, certifying that a ship comes from a place where there is no contagious disease, and that none of her crew was infected with such a disease.
- Bill of Lading - A document by which the Master of a ship acknowledges having received in good order and condition (or the reverse) certain specified goods consigned to him by some particular shipper, and binds himself to deliver them in similar condition, unless the perils of the sea, fire or enemies prevent him, to the consignees of the shippers at the point of destination on their paying him the stipulated freight. A bill of lading specifies the name of the master, the port and destination of the ship, the goods, the consignee, and the rate of freight.
- Binge - The operation of rinsing out a cask to prepare it for new contents. Casks were once the primary means of carrying on board the necessary water and victuals.
- Binoculars - An optical device for magnifying distant objects by means of lenses and prisms, consisting of two barrels, one for each eye.
- Binnacle - The mount and housing for the compass, usually located on the wheel's pedestal.
- Bird's Nest - A small round platform, smaller than a Crow's Nest, which was placed at the top of the mast to provide a greater range of vision from a ship at sea.
- Biscuit - Bread that was supplied to ships before bakeries were introduced on board.
- Bite - An anchor is said to bite when the flukes dig themselves into the ground and hold firm without dragging.
- Bitt - A vertical post extending above the deck for securing mooring lines
- Bitter End - The last part of a rope or final link of chain. The end made fast to the vessel, as opposed to the "working end", which may be attached to an anchor, cleat, other vessel, etc.
- Black Cargo - Cargo banned by general cargo workers for some reason. This ban could be because the cargo is dangerous or hazardous to health.
- Black Gang - Nautical slang for the engineroom crew. Included the chief engineer, who ran the engine and supervised; oilers and wipers, who lubricated and maintained the engine; and firemen and coal-passers, who fed the steam boilers.
- Black Jack - (1) The flag traditionally flown by pirate ships. (2) The name given by sailors to the bubonic plague, whose victims were said to turn black.
- Black Squall - A sudden squall of wind accompanied by lightning.
- Black-Down - The operation of tarring and blacking the rigging or hull to act as a preservative against the action of salt water. the best mixture was said to be coal tar, vegetable tar, and salt water boiled together and laid on hot.
- Blanket - To block the wind from the sails of a boat that is to leeward; a tactical maneuver whereby a boat uses its sails to blanket the competitor's wind, slowing him down; to take wind from a sail.
- Bleed - To bleed is the operation of draining any water out of a Buoy which may have seeped inside after long use at sea.
- Bleed the Monkey - Secretly, to remove spirit from a keg or cask by making a small hole and sucking through a straw. also called Suck the Monkey
- Block - A wooden, metal or plastic case in which one or more sheaves (pulleys) are placed, through which turns of line (falls) are threaded for the purpose of gaining mechanical advantage or changing the direction of motion. Lines used with a block are known as tackle.
- Block and Tackle - A combination of one or more blocks and the associated tackle necessary to give a mechanical advantage. Useful for lifting heavy loads.
- Blockade - In maritime warfare, a declaration published by a power forbidding sea-borne trade with an enemy.
- Blooper - Light-weight foresail similar to a spinnaker but set without a pole.
- Blow - The action of a whale when it comes to the surface and expels the seawater it has taken in while feeding. The traditional hail of the lookout in a whaling ship when sighting this spouting water is "There she blows".
- Blowing Great Guns - Old term for a heavy gale or hurricane.
- Blowing the Grampus - Old term for waking a sailor asleep on watch by throwing a bucket of cold water over him.
- Blue Peter - A flag signaling that a ship is about to sail and that all should report on board. It is International Code Flag "P".
- Bluejacket - A term describing the seamen of a British warship.
- Bluenose - A general nautical term for Canadians, but more especially for Nova Scotian sailing ships and men.
- Bluewater Sailing - Open ocean sailing
- Board - To go onboard, to go into a ship.
- Boarding Party - Designated members of ship's company formed into a military unit that will go aboard another vessel.
- Boat - A fairly indefinite term. A waterborne vehicle smaller than a ship. One definition is a small craft carried aboard a ship.
- Boat Hook - A long sturdy pole fitted with a blunt hook at one end designed to catch a line when coming alongside a pier or mooring, to facilitate putting a line over a piling, recovering an object dropped overboard, or in pushing or fending off.
- Boat Speed - Speed through the water, not "over ground".
- Boatswain - Also bosun, bos'n, bo's'n, and bo'sun, all of which are pronounced bosun. The highest unlicensed rating in the deck department who has immediate charge of all deck hands, oversees deck crew, maintenance and upkeep of the ship except for the engine room and galley areas
- Bobstay - A stay from the stem of a boat to the end of the bowsprit used to counteract the upward pull of the forestay.
- Boilers - Steam generating units used aboard ship to provide steam for propulsion and for heating and other auxiliary purposes.
- Bollard - A large solid post on a wharf or pier for securing mooring lines; the same when constructed on the deck of a ship.
- Bolster - A piece of wood fitted in various places to act as a preventative to chafe.
- Bolt Rope - A rope sewn into the luff or foot of a sail for use in attaching to the mast or boom.
- Bonaventure - On older sailing ships, an additional lateen shaped mizzen sail carried on the fourth mast, known as a bonaventure mizzen.
- Bone - Foam or spray which is thrown out under the bow of a ship when she is under way. If fast moving with a lot of spray being thrown out, the vessel is said to have "A bone in her teeth".
- Booby Hatch - The cover of a scuttle-way or small hatchway which leads to to or from a store room, cabin of small craft, crew's quarters, the forecastle or fore peak.
- Boom - A horizontal pole or spar attached to the mast to which the foot (lower edge) of the sail is fastened
- Boom Crotch or Crutch - A notched support for the boom when the sail is not raised. Unlike a gallows frame, a crutch is stowed when boat is sailing.
- Boom Preventer - A block and tackle attached to the boom and the deck to prevent the main from gybing when sailing downwind
- Boom Vang - Any system, usually block & tackle or hydraulic, used to hold the boom down. This is useful for maintaining proper sail shape by exerting a downward pull on the boom, particularly when running or on a broad reach.
- Boomkin - A stern sprit or spar extending from the stern.
- Booms - On larger sailing vessels, the space between the foremast and mainmast where spare spars were stored.
- Boot Stripe or Boot Top - A painted stripe along the waterline delineating the topside from the bottom paint
- Booty - Goods from a captured ship which was permitted to be distributed among the captors at once.
- Bore - Sudden and rapid flow of tide in certain rivers and estuaries which rolls up in the form of a wave. also known as Eagre.
- Born With a Silver Spoon - An old naval saying to indicate those young men who, through birth or connection, were able to enter the Royal Navy without examination. Their subsequent promotion was assured.
- Boss - The swell of a ship's hull around the propeller shaft.
- Boss Plate - A curved plate covering (one on each side) the boss of a propeller post and the curved portion of frames in way of the stern tube of a screw steamer. This plate is of extra thickness.
- Bo'suns Call, Pipe, or Whistle - Once the only method, other than human voice, of passing orders to men on board ship; the instructions to perform certain tasks were conveyed by different notes and pitches on the high-pitched whistle.
- Bosun's Chair - Canvas or wood seat attached a halyard to raise and lower someone to work on the mast
- Bottlescrew - see Turnbuckle
- Bottom - (1) The underside of the hull that sits in the water (2) The ocean floor
- Bottomry - Mortgage on a ship executed by the master who is out of touch with the owners and needs to raise money for repairs or to complete a voyage. also known as Bummaree.
- Bound - Proceeding in a specified direction, or to a specified place.
- Bow - The forwardmost or front part of the vessel. Opposite of Stern
- Bow & Beam Bearings - A set of bearings taken from an object with a known position, such as a landmark, to determine the ship's location. A type of running fix.
- Bow Line - A docking line leading from the bow.
- Bow Spring Line - A bow pivot line used in docking and undocking, or a dock line leading aft from the bow to prevent the boat from moving forward while made fast to a dock or pier.
- Bow Thrusters - A propeller at the lower sea-covered part of the bow of the ship which turns at right angles to the fore-and-aft line and thus provides transverse thrust as a maneuvering aid.
- Bowditch - A reference book named after the original author, Nathaniel Bowditch. Updated versions contain tables and other information useful for navigation.
- Bowline - A knot use to form an eye or loop at the end of a rope. A knot with many uses, it is simple and strong, its loop will not slip, and it is easily untied after being exposed to a strain. also see Running Bowline.
- Bowse - To pull downward on a rope or fall in order to provide more tautness. Heave means an upward pull and Haul means a horizontal pull.
- Bowsprit - A spar which projects forward from the bow of some boats, and extends the sail plan by allowing the headsails to be secured further forward.
- Box Off - In a square rigged ship, the act of hauling the head sheets to windward and laying the head-yards flat aback in order to bring the ships head out of the wind while tacking. This is done when helm action alone is insufficient.
- Box the Compass - To know and to be able to recite the points of a compass from north to south to north again, both clockwise and counter-clockwise.
- Brace - The operation of swinging round, by means of braces, the yards of a square rigged ship to set the sails more efficiently to the wind.
- Brace of Shakes - A moment of time which could be measured by the shaking of a sail as a sailing ship comes into the wind.
- Braces - On square rigged ships, lines or cables attached to the ends of each yard; these are used to pivot (brace) the yards around the mast at different angles to the fore-and-aft line of the ship to make the most of the wind..
- Brails - Lines used to pull the outer edge (leech) of a fore-and-aft sail forward to a mast. These lines are used to temporaily furl the sail.
- Brash - Ice broken into pieces, and projecting very little above sea level.
- Breach - (1) Said of seas that break over a vessel or over a sea wall. (2) A whale breaches when it leaps out of the water.
- Breadth - See Beam
- Break of the Poop - The forward end of a ship's after superstructure, where the poop deck descends to the upper deck.
- Break Sheer - When an anchored vessel is forced, by wind or current, to swing across her anchor so as to risk fouling it with her own cable, she is said to break sheer.
- Breakers - Waves breaking over rocks or shoals. A wave that approaches shallow water, causing the wave height to exceed the Depth of the water it is in, in effect tripping it. The wave changes from a smooth surge in the water to a cresting wave with water tumbling down the front of it. They serve as a warning that there is danger there.
- Breakwater - A manmade structure, in or around a harbor, designed to break the force of the sea, thus providing shelter.
- Bream - An old method of cleaning a vessels bottom by burning off weed, barnacles or other growth while the vessel was in dry dock or careened. Breaming was also known as graving.
- Breast Hook - An athwartship or horizontal member running between the inside surfaces of the hull.
- Breast Line - A docking line going at approximately a right angle from the boat to the dock, preventing movement away from the dock. Also known as a Waist Line.
- Breech of a Block - The part of a block which is opposite the swallow, which is where the line enters.
- Bridge - (1) The location from which a vessel is steered and its Speed controlled; navigation and command center of the vessel. (2) A man made structure crossing a body of water.
- Bridge Deck - The transverse partition between the cockpit and the cabin.
- Bridge House - The erection or superstructure fitted about amidship on the upper deck of a ship. The officer's quarters, staterooms and accommodations are usually in the bridge house.
- Bridle - A line or wire secured at both ends in order to distribute a strain between two points; a short length of wire with a line attached at the midpoint. A bridle is used to distribute the load of the attached line.
- Brig - A two-masted vessel with both masts square rigged. On the sternmost mast, the main mast, there is also a gaff sail
- Brigantine - A two-masted vessel with foremast square rigged, and mainmast fore and aft rigged. Originally, a ship of brigands, or pirates.
- Brightwork - Varnished woodwork and/or polished metal
- Bring About - To reverse or change directions, to turn around
- Bring-To - To bring a sailing vessel to a stop with her sails still set. This can be accomplished on a square rigged ship by bracing the yards aback on her foremast; on fore-and-aft rigged boats it is done by bringing her head into the wind so that the sails are no longer drawing.
- Bristol Fashion - Kept in a neat seaman-like manner.
- Broach - To spin out of control and capsize or nearly capsize; The turning of a boat broadside to the wind or waves, subjecting it to possible capsizing; a turning or swinging of the boat that puts the beam of the boat against the waves, creating a danger of swamping or capsizing; loss of steering. A knockdown.
- Broad on the Beam - The position of an object that lies off to one side of the vessel.
- Broad Reach - A point of sail where the boat is sailing away from the wind, but not directly downwind; Sailing with the wind coming from any direction from abeam to on the quarter, with the bow approximately 135 Degrees to the wind source and the sails let out nearly all the way
- Brow - A gangway or gangplank. Used to cross from one ship to another, or from a ship to a pier.
- Bucko - A bullying and tyrannical officer; he would drive his crew by brutality and the power of his fists.
- Bulk - Cargo shipped in loose condition and of a homogeneous nature. Cargoes that are shipped unpackaged either dry, such as grain and ore, or liquid, such as petroleum products. Bulk service generally is not provided on a regularly scheduled basis, but rather as needed, on specialized ships, transporting a specific commodity.
- Bulk Carrier - Ship specifically designed to transport vast amounts of cargoes such as sugar, grain, wine, ore, chemicals, liquefied natural gas; coal and oil.
- Bulkhead - A name given to any vertical partition or wall which separates different compartments or spaces from one another, also adding strength. Sometimes bulkheads are also watertight, adding to the vessel's safety.
- Bull Rope - Used for hoisting a topmast or topgallant mast on a square rigged ship.
- Bullseye - (1) A round eye through which a line is led, usually in order to change the direction of pull. (2) A thick piece of glass set flush in the deck to admit light below.
- Bulwark(s) - A railing around the deck of a boat to keep things from going overboard and the seas from coming aboard; the strake of shell plating above a Weather or shelter deck; the part of a ship's side that extends above the main deck to protect it against heavy Weather.
- Bumboat - A boat selling supplies, provisions, and articles to ships.
- Bumper - There is no such thing on a boat! See Fender.
- Bumpkin - A short spar projecting over the stern of a sailing vessel to sheet the mizzen sail when the mizzen-mast is so far aft that there's not enough room inboard to bring down the sheet and trim the sail. Also, a short spar extending from the stemhead in place of a bowsprit.
- Bung - A round wood plug inserted in a hole to cover a nail, screw, or bolt.
- Bunk - a sleeping berth or bed.
- Bunker(s) - A compartment in which fuel is stored; fuel consumed by the engines of a ship
- Bunkering - Re-fueling the vessel.
- Bunt - (1) The middle part of a square sail. (2) The line(s) attached to the middle of the foot of the sail used to haul the bunt up to the center of the yard.
- Bunting - Thin cloth of woven wool in various colors used to make flags.
- Buoy - (1) A floating object employed as an aid to mariners to mark the navigable limits of channels, their fairways, sunken dangers, isolated rocks, etc. (2) an anchored float marking a position or for use as a mooring.
- Buoyancy - The capacity for floating.
- Burdened Vessel - A boat required to keep clear of a vessel that has the right of way according to the applicable Navigation Rules (the Privileged Vessel or Stand-on Vessel ). Also known as the Give-Way Vessel.
- Burgee - A type of flag used to identify a boater's affiliation with a yacht club or Boating organization.
- Burgoo - 1) 17th C. A gruel or porridge made of oatmeal or any available grain as minimal basic sustenance for sailing ship crew. Seasoned with salt, sugar, and butter. Lascar seamen may have (when almost starving ?) gratefully called it "Bar-goo" meaning "faeces of the sacred cow" in Hindi. 2) Name of the Pearson Invicta class 38 foot yacht, the smallest winner, and the first made of fiberglass, that won win the Bermuda Yacht Race 1964 in just over 80 Hours.
- Butt - The squared end of a plank used on the side of a wooden vessel where it is secured to the timbers.
- Buttock - The breadth of a ship where the hull rounds down to the stern
- Buys Ballot Law - If you are in the Northern Hemisphere, a storm's center and direction of travel can be determined by using Buys Ballot's Law. To do this, face the wind and extend your right arm out at about 90° - 135° from the direction you are facing. Your arm is now pointing approximately at the center of the storm. Periodic determinations like this will indicate the storm's relative movement and on which side of the hurricane's track line you are located. It is reversed in the Southern Hemisphere
- By the Board - Overboard and by the ship's side.
- By the Lee - Sailing downwind with the wind blowing over the leeward side of the boat, increasing the possibility of an unexpected jibe.
- By the Wind - Sailing close-hauled
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C [ Charlie ]
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D [ Delta ]
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E [ Echo ]
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F [ Foxtrot ]
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G [ Golf ]
(Weather) tack of a square sail forward, to encourage it to fill when the vessel
is hauled so closely on the wind as to begin to backfill the sail.
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H [ Hotel ]
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I [ India ]
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J [ Juliet ]
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K [ Kilo ]
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L [ Lima ]
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M [ Mike ]
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N [ November ]
O [ Oscar ]
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P [ PaPa ]
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Q [ Quebec ]
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R [ Romeo ]
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S [ Sierra ]
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T [ Tango ]
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U [ Uniform ]
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V [ Victor ]
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W [ Whiskey ]
Mackerel skies and mares' tails
Make tall ships carry short sailsRed sky at night, sailor's delight;
Red sky in the morning, sailors take warning.Rainbow in the morning, sailors take warning,
Rainbow toward night, sailors' delight.A backing wind says storms are nigh,
But a veering wind will clear the sky.Seagull, seagull, sit on the sand,
It's never good Weather when you're on the land.When a halo rings the moon or sun,
The rain will come upon the run.If wooly fleeces deck the heavenly way,
Be sure no rain will mar a summer's day.With the rain before the wind,
Stays and topsails you must mind,
But with the wind before the rain,
Your topsails you may set again.When boat horns sound hollow,
Rain will surely follow.
- Weather Side - The windward side.
- Weathercock - (1) A weathercock is a weathervane, especially one in the form of a rooster. (2) As a verb, it means to have a tendency to veer in the direction of the wind.
- Weatherly - A sailing vessel is said to be weatherly when she can sail closer to the wind than the average, thus gaining an advantage when the destination is to windward.
- Weeping - When water oozes through the seams of a vessel's shell, or a steam boiler, etc., they are said to weep.
- Weigh - To haul up; as, weigh the anchor.
- Weigh Anchor - To raise anchor in preparation for departure.
- Well Deck - The two spaces on the main deck of an older type merchant ship, one between the forecastle and the midships housing which supports the bridge, and the other between this midships area and the poop deck. Most modern merchant vessels are now built with the bridge aft and an uninterrupted flush deck from the bridge to the bow of the ship.
- Well Found - Said of a vessel that is adequately fitted, stored, and furnished.
- West - One of the 4 cardinal compass points. West is at 270° on a compass card.
- West Wind, Westerly Wind - Wind coming from west.
- Wet - A maritime term meaning stupid.
- Wet Dock - Repairs made without removing the vessel from the water.
- Wet Locker - A locker equipped with a drain so that wet clothes can be stored in it without damaging other objects in the boat.
- Wetted Surface - The whole of the external surface of a vessel's hull that is in contact with the water in which she is floating.
- Whack - An old term for a seaman's daily rations.
- Whaler - A ship engaged in the whale fishery.
- Wharf - Man-made structure of wood or stone parallel to the shoreline, used for loading and offloading of cargo, embarkation and disembarkation of passengers, or making fast. Virtually the same as a quay, except a quay is generally built only of stone.
- Wharfage - Charge to a ship for using a wharf.
- Wharfinger - One who owns or manages a wharf.
- Wheel - (1) Device used for steering a boat. (2) Slang for a ship's propeller.
- Wheelhouse - The deckhouse of a vessel where the helm is located.
- Wheelsman - Another name for the helmsman; one who steers a ship via a wheel.
- Where Away? - Inquiry addressed to a look-out man, demanding precise direction of an object he has sighted and reported.
- Whip, Whipping - [Knots] - To bind the strands of a line with a small cord. Winding twine or heavy thread around the end of a line to keep it from unraveling
- Whisker Pole - A pole connected to the mast and the clew of the jib, to hold the jib out when going downwind
- Whistle Buoy - A navigational Buoy with a whistle.
- Whistling for Wind - Based on an old tradition that whistling at sea will cause a wind to rise.
- Whistling Psalms to the Taffrail - Nautical phrase that means giving good advice that will not be taken.
- White Horses - Fast-running waves with white foam crests.
- Wholesome - Said of craft that behaves well in bad Weather.
- Wide Berth - To avoid something by a large Distance.
- Widow-maker - A term for the bowsprit (many sailors lost their lives falling off the bowsprit while tending sails).
- Wildcat - A special type of drum or sprocket on a windlass constructed to handle the anchor chain links. Also referred to as a chain gypsy.
- Winch - A metal drum shaped device used to increase hauling power when raising or trimming sails, loading and discharging cargo, or for hauling in lines. A machine that has a drum on which to coil a rope, cable or chain for hauling, pulling or hoisting.
- Winch Head - A drum (usually of small diameter and concave) on a winch. Designed for taking and holding the turns of a rope.
- Wind Dog - An incomplete rainbow, or part of a rainbow. It is supposed to indicate approach of a storm.
- Wind Rose - A diagram usually shown on pilot charts that indicates the frequency and intensity of wind from different directions for a particular place
- Wind Scoop - A funnel shaped device used to force wind in a hatch and ventilate the below decks area.
- Wind Shadow - The wind being blocked by a land mass, obstruction, or sails from another boat. This creates a windless area on boats downwind away from them.
- Winding - Turning a vessel end for end between buoys, or along-side a wharf or pier.
- Windlass - A special form of winch used to hoist the anchors. It has two drums designed to grab the links of the anchor chains and is fitted with ratchet and braking device suitable for "paying out" chain. - A windlass revolves around a horizontal axis, as opposed to a capstan, which rotates around a vertical axis.
- Window - A transparent portion of a jib or mainsail.
- Windshift - The natural occurrence of the movement of the wind. Sailors use windshifts to sail a shorter Distance on a race course.
- Windward - Towards the wind. Windward is an adjective meaning the direction from which the wind is blowing. The windward side of a boat is the one which the wind hits first. "Sailing to windward" means sailing towards the wind. Opposite of leeward.
- Windward Mark - A racing mark or Buoy that is set upwind.
- Wing and Wing - Sailing directly downwind with two sails set. Usually the mainsail on one side and a headsail on the other, or one headsail on each side.
- Wishbone - A boom composed of two separate curved pieces, one on either side of the sail. With this rig, sails are usually self tending and loose-footed.
- Without Prejudice - Words used when a statement, comment, or action is not to be taken as implying agreement or disagreement, or affecting in any way a matter in dispute, or under consideration.
- Working Sheet - The sheet that is currently taught and in use to control a sail. The opposite of the lazy sheet.
- Worm - The operation of passing a small line in a spiral between the lays of a rope, in preparation for parcelling and serving. Rope is wormed, parcelled and served to protect it from water which could rot it, or from chafing
- Wrack - (1) To destroy by wave action. (2) Seaweed thrown ashore by sea.
- Wreck - The hull of a ship which is a total loss through Weather stress, collision, fire, sinking, stranding or any other cause.
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X [ X-ray ]
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Y [ Yankee ]
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Z [ Zulu ]