futtock-holes

The Sailor's Word-Book

Places through the top-rim for the futtock-plates.

Related Words

  • Futtock

    ·noun One of the crooked timbers which are scarfed together to form the lower part of the compound r...

    Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

  • futtock-head

    In ship-building, is a name for the 5th, the 7th, and the 9th diagonals, the intervening bevellings ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • futtock-plank

    The first plank of the ceiling next the kelson; the limber-strake. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • futtock-plates

    Iron plates with dead-eyes, crossing the sides of the top-rim perpendicularly. The dead-eyes of the ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • futtock-riders

    When a rider is lengthened by means of pieces batted or scarphed to it and each other, the first pie...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • futtock-shrouds

    , or foot-hook shrouds. Are short pieces of rope or chain which secure the lower dead-eyes and fut...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • futtock-staff

    A short piece of wood or iron, seized across the upper part of the shrouds at equal distances, to wh...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • futtock-timbers

    See futtocks. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • dream-holes

    the openings left in the walls of steeples, towers, barns, &c. for the admission of light. Glouc. ...

    A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose

  • blow-holes

    The nostrils of the cetaceans, situated on the highest part of the head. In the whalebone whales the...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • bobstay-holes

    Those cut through the fore-part of the knee of the head, between the cheeks, for the admission of th...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • cat-holes

    Places or spaces made in the quarter, for carrying out fasts or springs for steadying or heaving ast...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • eyelet-holes

    , are necessary in order to bend a sail to its yard or boom, or to reef it; they consist of round ho...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • hawse-holes

    Cylindrical holes cut through the bows of a ship on each side of the stem, through which the cables ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • head-holes

    The eyelet-holes where the rope-bands of a sail are fitted; they are worked button-hole fashion, ove...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • holes, eyelet

    or œillet. The holes in sails for points and rope-bands which are fenced round by stitching the ed...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • lewis-holes

    Two holes in the surface of a mortar, superseding ears. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • loop-holes

    Small openings made in the walls of a castle, or a fortification, for musketry to fire through. Also...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • marline-holes

    Holes made for marling, or lacing the foot-rope and clues in courses and top-sails. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • mast-holes

    The apertures in the deck-partners for stepping the masts. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • point-holes

    The eyelet-holes for the points. ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • port-holes

    See ports ...

    The Sailor's Word-Book

  • sludge-holes

    Adaptations at the ends of the water-passages between the flues of a steamer's boilers, by which the...

    The Sailor's Word-Book