cable-stream, stream-cable

The Sailor's Word-Book

A hawser or rope something smaller than the bower, used to move or hold the ship temporarily during a calm in a river or haven, sheltered from the wind and sea, &c.

Related Words

  • stream-cable

    A hawser smaller than the lower cables, and used with the stream-anchor to moor the ship in a shelte...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • Stream

    ·noun A beam or ray of light. II. Stream ·vt To <<Unfurl>>. III. Stream ·vi To pour out, or emit, ...

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • stream

    Anglo-Saxon for flowing water, meaning especially the middle or most rapid part of a tide or current...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • Cable

    ·vt To fasten with a cable. II. Cable ·vt & ·vi To telegraph by a submarine cable. III. Cable ·vt ...

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • cable

    A thick, strong rope or chain which serves to keep a ship at anchor; the rope is cable-laid, 10 inch...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • Stream clock

    ·add. ·- An instrument for ascertaining the velocity of the blood in a vessel. ...

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • Stream gold

    ·add. ·- Gold in alluvial deposits; placer gold. ...

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • Stream line

    ·add. ·- The path of a constituent particle of a flowing fluid undisturbed by eddies or the like. ...

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • Stream wheel

    ·add. ·- A wheel used for measuring, by its motion when submerged, the velocity of flowing water; a ...

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • gulf-stream

    Is especially referable to that of Mexico, the waters of which flow in a warm stream at various velo...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • sea-stream

    In polar parlance, is when a collection of bay-ice is exposed on one side to the ocean, and affords ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • stream-anchor

    A smaller one by two-thirds than the bowers, and larger than the kedges, used to ride steady, or moo...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • stream-ice

    A collection of pieces of drift or bay ice, joining each other in a ridge following in the line of c...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • stream-lake

    One which communicates with, the sea by means of a river. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-sheet, sheet-cable

    The spare bower cable belonging to a ship. Sheet is deemed stand-by, and is also applied to its anch...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • Sheet cable

    ·- The cable belonging to the sheet anchor. ...

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • cable-bends

    Two small ropes for lashing the end of a hempen cable to its own part, in order to secure the clinch...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-bitted

    So bitted as to enable the cable to be nipped or rendered with ease. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-bitts

    See bitts. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-buoys

    Peculiar casks employed to buoy up rope cables in a rocky anchorage, to prevent their rubbing agains...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-enough

    The call when cable enough is veered to permit of the anchor being brought to the cat-head. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-hanger

    A term applied to any person catching oysters in the river Medway, not free of the fishery, and who ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-stage

    A place constructed in the hold, or cable-tier, for coiling cables and hawsers on. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-tier

    The place in a hold, or between decks, where the cables are coiled away. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • sheet-cable

    A hempen cable used when riding in deep water, where the weight of a chain cable would oppress a shi...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • Stream of Egypt

    (Isa. 27:12), the Wady el-Arish, called also "the river of Egypt," R.V., "brook of Egypt" (Num. 34:5...

    Easton's Bible Dictionary

  • Stream Of Egypt

    occurs once in the Old Testament- (Isaiah 27:12) [RIVER OF EGYPT] RIVER OF EGYPT - 3664 ...

    William Smith's Bible Dictionary

  • Cable, George Washington

    (b. 1844) American novelist. Old Creole Days (1879), The Grandissimes (1880), Madame Delphine (1881...

    Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature by John W. Cousin

  • bending the cable

    The operation of clinching, or tying the cable to the ring of its anchor. The term is still used for...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable-laid rope

    Is a rope of which each strand is a hawser-laid rope. Hawser-laid ropes are simple three-strand rope...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • chain-cable compressor

    A curved arm of iron which revolves on a bolt through an eye at one end, at the other is a larger ey...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • chain-cable controller

    A contrivance for the prevention of one part of the chain riding on another while heaving in. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • chain-cable shackles

    Used for coupling the parts of a chain-cable at various lengths, so that they may be disconnected wh...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • range of cable

    A sufficient quantity of cable left slack to allow the anchor to reach the ground before the cable i...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • veering cable, the

    That cable which is veered out in unmooring, and not unspliced or unshackled in clearing hawse. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • stream the buoy, to

    To let the buoy fall from the after-part of the ship's side into the water, preparatory to letting g...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • bitt the cable, to

    To put it round the bitts, in order to fasten it, or slacken it out gradually, which last is called ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cable, to coil a

    To lay it in fakes and tiers one over the other. ♦ To lay a cable. (See laying.) ♦ To pay cheap ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cut the cable, to

    A manœuvre sometimes necessary for making a ship cast the right way, or when the anchor cannot be we...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • stopper of the cable

    Commonly called a deck-stopper. A piece of rope having a large knot at one end, and hooked or lashed...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • testing a chain-cable

    Trying its strength by the hydraulic machine, which strains it beyond what it is likely to undergo w...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • stand clear of the cable!

    A precautionary order when about to let go the anchor, that nothing may obstruct it in running out o...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • veer away the cable, to

    To slack and let it run out. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • moor a cable each way, to

    Is dropping one anchor, veering out two cables' lengths, and letting go another anchor from the oppo...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • moor with a spring on the cable, to

    See spring. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book