See main-breadth.
·noun Progress toward eminence; grade; degree. II. Height ·noun Degree of latitude either north or ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
Synonymous with hill, and meaning generally any ground above the common level of the place. Our earl...
The Sailor's Word-Book
·adj Compar. of Low, ·adj. II. Lower ·noun Cloudiness; gloominess. III. Lower ·noun A frowning; su...
Are opposed to each other; the former being the order to lower gradually, and the latter to lower ex...
·adj Pertaining to, or kept in, the lower case; — used to denote the small letters, in distinction ...
In the Little Minories (W. Stow, 1722-Boyle, 1799). Not named in the maps. ...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
Out of the Crescent, Minories, in Portsoken Ward (Lockie, 1816). Not named in the maps. ...
The atmosphere to become cloudy. Also, to ease down gradually, expressed of some weighty body suspen...
The counter between the upper counter and the rail under the lights. ...
The heaviest armament, usually on the lower deck. ...
See finishings. ...
The space for cargo in a merchant-vessel, fitted with 'tween-decks. ...
A well-known reach in the Thames where ships wait for the turn of the tide. ...
The lifts of the fore, main, and crossjack-yards. ...
See mast. ...
The opposite to the upper transit of a circumpolar star: the passage sub polo. ...
In ship-building, is a delineation generally in two lines upper and lower determining the height of ...
A former perquisite of seamen on getting safely through a particular navigation. ...
West from Little Thames Street to the Hermitage Swing Bridge and Basin (P.O. Directory). In the eig...
East from London Bridge to Tower Hill (P.O. Directory). In Tower, Billingsgate and Bridge Wards. Fi...
The second on the builder's draught, representing the lower height of breadth, on which line is set ...
The lowest range of beams in a merchantman. ...
Used for the depth of the hold. ...
To fire the lower tier of guns. Also said of a person using violent language. ...
See Salutation Court. ...
That part of a mast which is below deck to the step in the kelson; of a bowsprit, the portion within...
An officer of considerable importance in former times in ships of the line; he was responsible for t...
To let go altogether, instead of lowering with a turn on a cleat or bitt-head. ...
See Wilson's Yard. ...
The old practice of morning and evening evolutions in a line-of-battle ship, wind and weather permit...