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Nautical Terms Glossary

A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z

A  
A.B. (Ableseaman) Rating a man able to hand, reef and steer.
Aback - (backwinded)
 
The sail filling on the wrong side in the case of a square rigged ship may cause the ship to go astern.(See All-Aback)
Abaft Towards the stern of a vessel.
Abaft the Beam Aft a line which extends out from amidships.
Abandon Ship An order given to leave a ship when it is in danger.
Abandonment

A marine insurance term indicating that the cost of repairs to a vessel is more than the cost of the vessel and cargo.

Abeam At right angle to the middle of the ship’s side.
Aboard Within a vessel.
Fall Aboard One vessel falls foul of another.
To Lay Aboard To sail alongside an enemy vessel with the intention of boarding.
Tacks Aboard To brace the yards around for sailing close hauled.
About On the other tack. To pass through the eye of the wind.
Above Board Above the deck.
Abreast Along side or at right to.
Accommodation (See LADDER)
A-Cock-Bill The situation of the yards when they are topped up at an angle with the deck. The situation of an anchor when it hangs to the cathead by the ring only.
Adrift Broken from moorings or fasts. Without Fasts.
Afloat Resting on the surface of the water.
Afore Forward. The opposite of abaft.
Aft -After At, near, or towards the stern. To move aft is to move to the back of the boat.
After

"Leading" - A line that lead from its point of attachment toward the stern.

Aground Touching the bottom.
Ahead In the direction of the vessel's head. Wind ahead is from the direction toward which the vessel's head points (opposite to A-stern).
Ahoy Seaman's call to attract attention.
A-Hull The situation of a vessel when she lies with all her sails furled and her helm lashed a-lee.
A-Lee The situation of the helm when it is put in the opposite direction from that in, which the wind blows.
All-Aback When all the sails are aback.
All Hands The whole crew.
All In The Wind When all the sails are shaking.
Aloft Up above, up the mast or in the rigging.
Aloof At a distance.
Amain Suddenly. At once.
Amidships In the middle of the ship, either to the length or breadth.
Anchor A hook which digs in to the bottom to keep the ship from drifting.
Anchorage A sheltered place or area where a boat can anchor.
Anchor Ball A black ball visible in all direction display in the forward part of a vessel at anchor.
Anchor Watch (see Watch) A member or members of the crew that keep watch and check the drift of ship.
Anchor Light A white light visible in all direction display in the forward part of a vessel at anchor.
An-End When a mast is perpendicular to the deck.
A-Peek When the cable is hove taut so as to bring the vessel nearly over her anchor. The yards are a-peek when they are topped up by contrary lifts.
Apparent Wind Wind felt on a vessel underway.
Apron A piece of timber fixed behind the lower part of the stern [sic], just above the fore end of the keel. A covering to the vent or lock of a cannon.
Arm - Yard-Arm The extremity of a yard. Also, the lower part of an anchor crossing the shank and terminating in the flukes.
Arming A piece of tallow put in the cavity and over the bottom of a lead-line.
A-Stern In the direction of the stern. The opposite of ahead.
A-Taunt (See TAUNT.)
Athwart Across.
Athwart-Ships Across the line of the vessel's keel.
Athwart-Hawse Across the direction of a vessel's head. Across her cable.
A-Trip

The situation of the anchor when it is raised clear of the ground. The same as a-weigh.

Avast! or Vast The command to stop, or cease, in any operation.
A-Weather The situation of the helm when it is put in the direction from which the wind blows.
A-Weigh The same as a-trip.
Awning A covering of canvass over a vessel's deck or over a boat, to keep off sun or rain.
B

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Back

To back an anchor is to carry out a smaller one ahead of the one by which the vessel rides, to take off some of the strain.
To back a sail is throw it aback.
To back and fill is alternately to back and fill the sails.

Backstay Mast support running to aft deck or another mast. (Stays).
Backstaff

A navigation instrument used to measure the apparent height of a landmark whose actual height is known such as the top of a lighthouse. From this information, the ship's distance from that landmark can be calculated.

Backwinded When the wind hits the leeward side of the sails.
Baggywrinkle Chafing gear made from old ropes.
Bagpipe To bagpipe the mizzen is to lay it aback by bringing the sheet to the weather mizzen rigging.
Bail Ironrod partially circling the boom to which sheet block is attached. (See Bale).
To remove water from the boat.
Bailers Openings in the bottom or transom to drain water when sailing (See Self Bailers.
Balance-Reef A reef in a spanker or fore-and-aft mainsail which runs from the outer head-earing, diagonally, to the tack. It is the closest reef and makes the sail triangular, or nearly so.
Bale
 

To bale a boat is to throw water out of her.
A fitting on the end of a spar to which a line may be led.

Ballast Is either pigs of iron, stones, or gravel, which last is called single ballast; and their use is to bring the ship down to her bearings in the water which her provisions and stores will not do.
Trim the ballast
is to spread it about and lay it even, or runs over one side of the hold to the other.
To freshen ballast is to shift it.
Coarse gravel is called shingle ballast.
Bank A boat is double banked when men seated on the same thwart pull two oars, one opposite the other.
Bar A bank or shoal at the entrance of a harbor.
Barber Hauler A line attached to the jib or jib sheet used to adjust the angle of sheeting by pulling the sheet towards the centre line of the boat.
Bare-Poles The condition of a ship when she has no sail set.
Barge A large double-banked boat used by the commander of a vessel in the navy.
Bark A 3-Masted Sailing Vessel with Sq. rigged on fore and main mast.
Barkentine A 3-Masted Sailing Vessel with Sq. rigged on fore mast only.
Barnacle A shellfish often found on a vessel's bottom.
Barratry An unlawful or fraudulent act or very gross and culpable negligence by the master or mariners of a vessel in violation of their duty as such, directly prejudicial to the owner or cargo, and without his consent.  Smuggling, trading with an enemy, casting away the ship, and plundering or destroying cargo are considered barratry."      Rene de Kerchove, International Maritime Dictionary, 2nd. Ed., p.44.

An alternate slant is contained in: (Sec. 296) of part XLII- Crimes, of Department of Commerce, Navigation Laws of the United States 1923, p. 397.

"Whoever, on the high seas, or within the United States, willfully and corruptly conspires, combines, and confederates with any other person, such other person being either within or without the United States, to cast away or otherwise destroy any vessel, with intent to injure any person that may have underwritten or may thereafter underwrite any policy insurance thereon or on goods on board thereof, or with intent to injure any person that has lent or advanced, or may lend or advance, any money on such vessel on bottomry or respondentia; or whoever, within the        United States, builds, fits, out, or aids in building or fitting out, any vessel with intent that the same be cast away or destroyed, with the intent herinbefore mentioned, shall be fined not more than ten thousand dollars and imprisoned not more than ten years. (Sec. 296.)"

British maritime writer AC Hardy, Wreck - SOS, 1944, p.33.

"Insurance companies are wise in their generation. They employ technical experts to help them, and he would be a bold or resourceful man who is able to-day to sink his ship without detection."

Battens

 
Thin strips of wood put around the hatches to keep the tarpaulin down. Also, put upon rigging to keep it from chafing. A large batten widened at the end and put upon rigging, is called a Scotchman.
Beacon
 
A post or buoy placed over a shoal or bank to warn vessels off. Also as a signal-mark on land.
Beam The widest part of the boat.
Beams

Strong pieces of timber stretching across the vessel to support the decks.
On the weather or lee beam is in a direction to windward or leeward at right angles with the keel.
On Beam Ends - The situation of a vessel when turned over so that her beams are inclined toward the vertical.

Beam Reach A point of sail where the boat is sailing at a right angle to the apparent wind.
Bearing

The direction of an object expressed either as a true bearing as shown on the chart or as a bearing relative to the heading of the boat.
The bearings of a vessel is the widest part of her below the plank-shear. That part of her hull which is on the waterline when she is at anchor and in her proper trim.

Bear

An object bears so and so when it is in such a direction from the person looking. To bear down upon a vessel is to approach her from the windward.
To bear up is to put the helm up, keep a vessel off from her course, and move her to leeward.
To bear away is the same as to bear up; being applied to the vessel instead of to the tiller.
To bear-a-hand.
To make haste.

Beating Going toward the direction of the wind by alternate tacks.
Beaufort Scale Is a system for estimating wind strengths.
Becalm To intercept the wind. A vessel or highland to windward is said to becalm another. So one sail becalms another.
Becket
 
A piece of rope placed so as to confines a spar or another rope. A handle made of rope in the form of a circle, (as the handle of a chest.) Is called a becket.
Bees Pieces of plank bolted to the outer end of the bowsprit to reeve the foretopmast stays through.
Belay Change order.  To make a line secure to a pin, cleat or bitt.
Belay pin Iron or wood pin fitted into railing to secure lines to.
Bend

To make fast.
To bend a sail is to make it fast to the yard. 
To bend a cable
is to make it fast to the anchor.
A bend is a knot by which one rope is made fast to another.

Bends The strongest part of a vessel's side to which the beams, knees, and foot-hooks are bolted. The part between the water's edge and the bulwarks.
Beneaped (See NEAPED)
Bentick Shrouds Formerly used and extending from the futtock-staves to the opposite channels.
Berth The place where a vessel lies. The place in which a man sleeps.
Between-Decks The space between any two decks of a ship.
Bibbs Pieces of timber bolted to the hounds of a mast to support the trestle-trees.
Bight The double part of a rope when it is folded; in contradistinction from the ends. Any part of a rope may be called the bight except the ends. Also, a bend in the shore making a small bay or inlet.
Bilge

The lowest part of the interior hull below the waterline.
Bilge-Ways - Pieces of timber bolted together and placed under the bilge, in launching.
Bilge Water - Water which settles in the bilge.
Bilge - The largest circumference of a cask

Bilged When the bilge is broken in.
Bilge Pump A mechanical, electrical, or manually operated pump used to remove water from the bilge.
Bill The point at the extremity of the fluke of an anchor.
Billet-Head (See HEAD.)
Binnacle A box near the helm containing the compass.
Biscuit

Bread intended for naval or military expeditions is now simply flour well kneaded with the least possible quantity of water into flat cakes and slowly baked."

It has been around for a long time - Pliny(c. AD 100) calls it 'panis nauticus' ".

Hard tack was another name for ship's biscuit and became a common term in the 1830s and 1840s.

Good biscuit was supposed to be one third heavier than the flour from which it was made. It was normally kept in cloth bags and rapidly became a home to weevils - no doubt increasing the protein content. It would keep for many years and was a major staple in ships until the advent of shipboard bakeries in the early years of the 20th Century.

Bitt A vertically posted above deck used to secure line. The cables are fastened to them, if there is no windlass. There are also bitts to secure the windlass, and on each side of the heel of the bowsprit.
Bitter Or Bitter-End. That part of the cable, which is abaft the bitts.
Blade The flat part of an oar which goes into the water.
Blanketing A tactical maneuver whereby a boat uses its sails to cover another competitor's wind so causing him to slow down.
Block A pulley used to gain mechanical advantage.
Bluewater Sailing Open ocean sailing, as opposed to sailing in protected waters e.g.. Lakes, bays.
Bluff A bluff-bowed or bluff-headed vessel is one which is full and square forward.
Board The stretch a vessel makes upon one tack when she is beating.
Stern-Board - When a vessel goes stern foremost.
By the Board - Said of masts, when they fall over the side.
Boarders Sailors used to make attack on other ships by boarding or used to repel boarders. Once the ship was captured they used to repair the ship and act as prize crew.
Boat-Hook An iron hook with a long staff held in the hand by which a boat is kept fast to a wharf, or vessel.
Boatswain (Pronounced bo-s'n.)  A warrant officer in the navy who has charge of the rigging and calls the crew to duty.
Bobstays Used to confine the bowsprit down to the stem or cutwater.
Bolsters Pieces of soft wood covered with canvass placed on the trestle-trees for the eyes of the rigging to rest upon.
Bolts Long cylindrical bars of iron or copper used to secure or unite the different parts of a vessel.
Bolt-Rope The rope which goes round a sail and to which the canvass is sewed.
Bonnet An additional piece of canvass attached to the foot of a jib, or a schooner's foresail by lacing. Taken off in bad weather.
Boom

A spar used to extend the foot of a fore-and-aft sail or studding-sail.
Boom-irons - Iron rings on the yards, through which the studding-sail booms traverse.
Boom Crutch - Support for the boom holding it up out of the way when the boat is at anchor or moored. Unlike a gallows frame, a crutch is stowed when sailing.
Boom Vang - A system used to hold the boom down when sailing downwind.

Boot Stripe A different color strip of paint at the waterline.
Boot Top A stripe near the waterline.
Boot-Topping Scraping off the grass, or other matter, that may be on a vessel's bottom, and daubing it over with tallow, or some mixture.
Bound Wind-bound. When a vessel is kept in port by a head wind.
Bow The forward part of the vessel.
Bowline A knot use to form an eye or loop at the end of a rope.
Bower

A working anchor, the cable of which is bent and reeved through the hawse-hole.
Best Bower - is the larger of the two bowers.

Bow-Grace A frame of old ropes or junk placed round the bows and sides of a vessel, to prevent the ice from injuring her.
Bowline (Pronounced bo-lin.)  A rope leading forward from the leech of a square sail, to keep the leech well out when sailing close-hauled. A vessel is said to be on a bowline, or on a taut bowline, when she is close-hauled.
Bowline-Bridle The span on the leech of the sail to which the bowline is toggled.
Bowse To pull upon a tackle.
Bowsies Are essentially long thin deadeyes used to tension the rig.
Bowsprit A long spar attached to the Jib boom in the bow; used to secure headsails.
Box-Hauling Wearing a vessel by backing the head sails.
Box To box the compass is to repeat the thirty-two points of the compass in order.
Brace

A rope by which a yard is turned about.
To brace a yard is to turn it about horizontally.
To brace up is to lay the yard fore fore-and-aft.
To brace in is to lay it nearer square.
To brace aback. (See ABACK.)
To brace to is to brace the head yards a little aback, in tacking or wearing.

Brails Ropes by which the foot or lower corners of fore-and-aft sails are hauled up.
Brake The handle of a ship's pump.
Break

The sudden rise or fall of the deck when not flush.
To break bulk is to begin to unload.
To
break ground is to lift the anchor from the bottom.
To
break shear is when a vessel at anchor in tending is forced the wrong way by the wind or current so that she does not lie so well for keeping herself clear of her anchor.

Break of the Poop Forward end of the poop deck.
Breaker A small cask containing water.
Breaming Cleaning a ship's bottom by burning.
Breast-Fast A rope used to confine a vessel sideways to a wharf or to some other vessel.
Breast-Hooks Knees placed in the forward part of a vessel across the stem to unite the bows on each side.
Breast Line A docking line going at a right angle from the boat to the dock.
Breast-Rope A rope passed round a man in the chains while sounding.
Breech The outside angle of a knee-timber. The after end of a gun.
Breeching A strong rope used to secure the breech of a gun to the ship's side.
Bridge Deck A partition between the cockpit and the cabin.
Bridle Spans of rope attached to the leeches of square sails to which the bowlines are made fast.
Bridle-Port The foremost port used for stowing the anchors.
Brig

Is a 2-Masted vessel with both masts square rigged. On the sternmost mast, the main mast, there is also a gaff sail.

An hermaphrodite brig has a brig's foremast and a schooner's mainmast.

Brigantine Is a 2-Masted vessel with the fore mast being square rigged.
Bright Work Varnished woodwork.
Broach The boat swings and puts the beam against the waves.
Broach - To To fall off so much when going free as to bring the wind round on the other quarter and take the sails aback.
Broad Reach A point of sailing where the boat is moving away from the wind, but not directly downwind.
Broadside The whole side of a vessel.
Broken-Backed The state of a vessel when she is so loosened as to droop at each end.
Bucklers Blocks of wood made to fit in the hawse-holes or holes in the half-ports when at sea. Those in the hawse-holes are sometimes called hawse-blocks.
Bulge (See BILGE)
Bulk

The whole cargo when stowed.
Stowed in Bulk is when goods are stowed loose instead of being stowed in casks or bags. (See BREAK BULK.)

Bulkhead The vertical partitions that divide the hull into separate compartments are called bulkheads. Some are watertight. These watertight bulkheads are so arranged that in case of accident at sea, water would be confined to one compartment only. The collision bulkhead in the front end is constructed to withstand heavy strain and shock in case the bow be staved in.
Bulkward, Bulwark Solid rail along ship side above deck to prevent men and gear from going overboard.
Bull A sailor's term for a small keg, holding a gallon or two.
Bull's Eye A small piece of stout wood with a hole in the centre for a stay or rope to reeve through, without any sheave, and with a groove round it for the strap which is usually of iron. In addition, a piece of thick glass inserted in the deck to let light below.
Bung A round wood plug inserted in hole to cover a nail screw or bolt.
Bunk A sleeping berth.
Buoy A floating navigation aid.
Burdened Vessel That vessel which, according to the applicable Navigation Rules, must give way to the privileged vessel.
Bulwarks The wood work round a vessel above her deck consisting of boards fastened to stanchions and timber-heads.
Bum-Boats Boats which lie alongside a vessel in port with provisions and fruit to sell.
Bumpkin Pieces of timber projecting from the vessel to board the fore tack to; and from each quarter, for the main brace-blocks.
Bunt The middle of a sail.
Buntine (Pronounced buntin.) Thin woolen stuff of which a ship's colors are made.
Buntlines Ropes used for hauling up the body of a sail.
Buoy

A floating cask or piece of wood attached by a rope to an anchor to show its position. Also, floated over a shoal or other dangerous place as a beacon.
To stream a buoy is to drop it into the water before letting go the anchor.
A
buoy is said to watch when it floats upon the surface of the water.

Burton

A tackle, rove in a particular manner.
A single Spanish burton has three single blocks or two single blocks and a hook in the bight of one of the running parts.
A
double Spanish burton has three double blocks.

Butt The end of a plank where it unites with the end of another.

Scuttlebutt  - A cask with a hole cut in its bilge and kept on deck to hold water for daily use.

Buttock That part of the convexity of a vessel abaft under the stern contained between the counter above and the after part of the bilge below and between the quarter on the side and the stern-post.
By - By the Head Said of a vessel when her head is lower in the water than her stern. If her stern is lower, she is by the stern.
By the lee (See LEE. See RUN.)
C

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Cabin The after part of a vessel in which the officers live.
Cabin Sole The bottom space of the enclosed space under the deck of a boat.
Cable The rope or chain made fast to the anchor. It is usually 120 fathoms in length.
Cable-Tier (See TIER.)
Caboose A house on deck where the cooking is done. Commonly called the Galley.
Calk (See CAULK.)
Cambered When the floor of a vessel is higher at the middle than towards the stem and stern.
Camel

A machine used for lifting vessels over a shoal or bar.

Camfering Taking off an angle or edge of a timber.
Canister Musket balls put into thin tin or wooden containers designed to break apart on firing and langrage as old chain links, scrap metal, horseshoe nails, stones, pottery pieces, etc., put into similar containers designed to break apart on firing. Langrage (Langrel Langrace) was considered barbaric, because it was almost certain to cause Tetanus. They didn't know about bacteria, but their clinical observations of causality were excellent.
Can-Hooks Slings with flat hooks at each end used for hoisting barrels or light casks, the hooks being placed round the chimes and the purchase hooked to the centre of the slings. Small ones are usually wholly of iron.
Cant-Pieces Pieces of timber fastened to the angles of fishes and side-trees to supply any part that may prove rotten.
Cant-Timbers

Timbers at the two ends of a vessel raised obliquely from the keel.
Lower Half Cants [reads "cints"] - Those parts of frames situated forward and abaft the square frames or the floor timbers which cross the keel.

Canvass The cloth of which sails are made. No. 1 is the coarsest and strongest.
Cap A thick, strong block of wood with two holes through it, one square and the other round, used to confine together the head of one mast and the lower art of the mast next above it.
Capstan

The drum-like part of the windlass which is a machine used for winding in rope, cables, or chain connected to an anchor cargo.

Capstan-Bars Are heavy pieces of wood by which the capstan is hove round.
Carline Wood stringer support for hatches and cabins.
Capsize To overturn.
Careen To heave a vessel down upon her side by purchases upon the masts. To lie over when sailing on the wind.
Carlings Short and small pieces of timber running between the beams.
Carrick-Bend A kind of knot.
Carrick-Bitts Are the windless bitts.
Carry-Away To break a spar or part a rope.
Cascabel Is the other term for the knob on a cannon and comes from Spanish, Catalan, etc. Cascabellus = Little bell.
Cast

To pay a vessel's head off in getting under way; on the tack, she is to sail upon.

Cat The tackle used to hoist the anchor up to the cat-head.
Cat-block The block of this tackle.
Cat-Harpin An iron leg used to confine the upper part of the rigging to the mast.
Cat-Head Large timbers projecting from the vessel's side to which the anchor is raised and secured.
Cat's-Paw

A kind of hitch made in a rope.

A light current of air seen on the surface of the water during a calm.

Caulk To fill wooden vessel seams with oakum and cotton using caulking irons and hammer.
Cavil (See KEVEL.)
Ceiling The inside planking of a vessel.
Chafe To rub the surface of a rope or spar.
Chafing-Gear

Is the stuff put upon the rigging and spars to prevent their chafing.

Chains Strong links or plates of iron, the lower ends of which are bolted through the ship's side to the timbers. Their upper ends are secured to the bottom of the dead-eyes in the channels, in addition, used familiarly for the CHANNELS which see. The chain cable of a vessel is called familiarly her chain.
Rudder-Chains Lead from the outer and upper end of the rudder to the quarters. They are hung slack.
Chain Boat A boat fitted up for recovering lost cables, anchors, etc.
Chain Bolt The bolt at the lower end of the chain plate which fastens it to the vessel's side.
Chain-Plates Plates of iron bolted to the side of a ship to which the chains and dead-eyes of the lower rigging are connected. Also used to support the standing rigging.
Chain Shot Two cannon balls connected together with either chain or an iron bar, was used to destroy the rigging other other ships.

Chain shot was first used in the 30 Years War. It was introduced by Gustavus Adolfus to be shot at a low, flat trajectory for breaking cavalry charges (and horses' legs). The naval use comes later.
Channels Broad pieces of plank bolted edgewise to the outside of a vessel. Used for spreading the lower rigging. (See CHAINS.)
Chanty Shanties are the work songs that were used on the square-rigged ships of the Age of Sail. Their rhythms coordinated the efforts of many sailors hauling on lines.
Chapelling

Wearing a ship round when taken aback without bracing the head yards.

Charley Noble Galley stovepipe.
Check A term sometime used for slacking off a little on a brace and then belaying it.
Cheeks The projections on each side of a mast upon which the trestle-trees rest. The sides of the shell of a block.
Cheerly Quickly, with a will.
Chess-Trees Pieces of oak fitted to the sides of a vessel abaft the fore chains with a sheave in them to board the main tack to.
Chimes The ends of the staves of a cask where they come out beyond the head of the cask.
Chinse To thrust oakum into seams with a small iron.
Chips Small pieces of timber offcuts left over from shipbuilding, Traditionally available to shipwrights and carpenters was much abused during the 17th cenury when whole house and furniture were buit.
Clamps Thick planks on the inside of vessels to support the ends of beams. In addition, crooked plates of iron fore-locked upon the trunnions of cannon. Any plate of iron made to turn, open and shut to confine a spar or boom as a studdingsail boom or a boat's mast.
Clasp-Hook (See CLOVE-HOOK.)
Cleat A piece of wood with two horns used in different parts of a vessel to belay ropes to.
Clew

The lower corner of square sails, and the after corner of a fore-and-aft sail.

To clew up is to haul up the clew of a sail.

Clew-Garnet A rope that hauls up the clew of a foresail or mainsail in a square-rigged vessel.
Clewline

A rope that hauls up the clew of a square sail. The clew-garnet is the clewline of a course.

Clinch A half-hitch stopped to its own part.
Close-Hauled Applied to a vessel which is sailing with her yards braced up to get as much possible to windward? The same as on a taut bowline, full and by, on the wind.
Clove Hitch A knot. Two half hitches around a spar, post, or rope.
Clove-Hook An iron clasp, in two parts, moving upon the same pivot and overlapping one another. Used for bending chain sheets to the clews of sails.
Club-Haul To bring a vessel's head round on the other tack by letting go the lee anchor and cutting or slipping the cable.
Clubbing Drifting down a current with an anchor out.
Coaking Uniting pieces of spar by means of tabular projections formed by cutting away the solid of one piece into a hollow so as to make a projection in the other in such a manner that they may correctly fit the butts preventing the pieces from drawing asunder.
Coaks Are fitted into the beams and knees of vessels to prevent their drawing.
Coal Tar Tar made from bituminous coal.
Coamings Raised work round the hatches to prevent water going down into the hold.
Coat

Mast-Coat is a piece of canvass tarred or painted placed round a mast or bowsprit where it enters the deck.

Cock-Bill To cock-bill a yard or anchor. (See A-COCK-BILL.)
Cock-Pit An apartment in a vessel of war used by the surgeon during an action.
Codline An eighteen thread line.
Coil To lay a rope down in circular turns. A coil is a quantity of rope laid up in that manner.
Collar An eye in the end or bight of a shroud or stay to go over the mast-head.
Come

Come home said of an anchor when it is broken from the ground and drags.

To come up a rope or tackle is to slack it off.

Companion A wooden covering over the staircase to a cabin.
Companion-Way The staircase to the cabin.
Companion-Ladder The ladder leading from the poop to the main deck.
Compass The instrument which tells the course of a vessel.
Compass-Timbers

Are such as are curved or arched.

Concluding-Line A small line leading through the centre of the steps of a rope or Jacob's ladder.
Conning, Or Cunning Directing the helmsman in steering a vessel.
Counter That part of a vessel between the bottom of the stern and the wing-transom and buttock.
Counter-Timbers 

Are short timbers put in to strengthen the counter.

To counter-brace yards is to brace the head-yards one way and the after-yards another.

Courses

The common term for the sails that hang from a ship's lower yards. The foresail is called the fore course and the mainsail the main course.

Coxswain (Pronounced cox'n.) The person who steers a boat and has charge of her.
Cranes Pieces of iron or timber at the vessel's sides, used to stow boats or spars upon. A machine used at a wharf for hoisting.
Crank The condition of a vessel when she is inclined to lean over a great deal and cannot bear much sail. This may be owing to her construction or to her stowage.
Creeper An iron instrument, like a grapnell, with four claws used for dragging the bottom of a harbor or river to find anything lost.
Cringle A short piece of rope with each end spliced into the bolt-rope of a sail confining an iron ring or thimble.
Cross-Bars Round bars of iron bent at each end used as levers to turn the shank of an anchor.
Cross-Chocks Pieces of timber fayed across the dead-wood amidships, to make good the deficiency at the heels of the lower futtocks.
Cross-Jack (Pronounced croj-jack.) The sail cross-jack yard is the lower crossed yard on the mizzen mast.
Cross-Pawls Pieces of timber that keeps a vessel together while in her frames.
Cross-Piece A piece of timber connecting two bitts.
Cross-Spales

Pieces of timber placed across a vessel and nailed to the frames to keep the sides together until the knees are bolted.

Cross-Trees Pieces of oak supported by the cheeks and trestle-trees at the mast-heads to sustain the tops on the lower mast and to spread the topgallant rigging at the topmast-head.
Crow-Foot A number of small lines rove through the uvrou [sic] to suspend an awning by.
Crown of an Anchor