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Port
·noun A passageway; an opening or entrance to an inclosed place; a gate; a door; a portal.
II. Port...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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port
An old Anglo-Saxon word still in full use. It strictly means a place of resort for vessels, adjacent...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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Fire
·vt To drive by fire.
II. Fire ·vt To <<Cauterize>>.
III. Fire ·vi To be irritated or inflamed wit...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire
1) For sacred purposes. The sacrifices were consumed by fire (Gen. 8:20). The ever-burning fire on t...
Easton's Bible Dictionary
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to fire
To fling with the hand, as a stone or other missile.
...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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fire!
The order to put the match to the priming, or pull the trigger of a cannon or other fire-arm so as t...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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Fire
is represented as the symbol of Jehovah's presence and the instrument of his power, in the way eithe...
William Smith's Bible Dictionary
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Half-port
·noun One half of a shutter made in two parts for closing a porthole.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Port-royalist
·noun One of the dwellers in the Cistercian convent of Port Royal des Champs, near Paris, when it wa...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Three-port
·add. ·adj Having three ports; specif.: Designating a type of two-cycle internal-combustion engine i...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Two-port
·add. ·adj Having two ports; specif.: Designating a type of two-cycle internal-combustion engine in ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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bridle-port
A square port in the bows of a ship, for taking in mooring bridles. They are also used for guns remo...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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cinque-port
A kind of fishing-net, having five entrances.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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closed port
One interdicted.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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convenient port
A general law-term in cases of capture, within a certain latitude of discretion; a place where a ves...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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free port
Ports open to all comers free of entry-dues, as places of call, not delivery.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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helm-port
The round hole or cavity in a ship's counter, through which the head of the rudder passes into the t...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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light-port
A scuttle made for showing a light through. Also, a port in timber ships kept open until brought dee...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port arms!
The military word of command to bring the fire-lock across the front of the body, muzzle slanting up...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-bars
Strong pieces of oak, furnished with two laniards, by which the ports are secured from flying open i...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-charges
, or harbour-dues.
Charges levied on vessels resorting to a port.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-flange
In ship-carpentry, is a batten of wood fixed on the ship's side over a port, to prevent water or dir...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-glaive
A sword-bearer.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-last
, or portoise.
Synonymous with gunwale.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-men
A name in old times for the inhabitants of the Cinque Ports; the burgesses of Ipswich are also so ca...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-mote
A court held in haven towns or ports.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-nails
These are classed double and single: they are similar to clamp-nails, and like them are used for fas...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-pendants
Ropes spliced into rings on the outside of the port-lids, and rove through leaden pipes in the ship'...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-piece
An ancient piece of ordnance used in our early fleets.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-reeve
A magistrate of certain sea-port towns in olden times.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-ropes
Those by which the ports are hauled up and suspended.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-sale
A public sale of fish on its arrival in the harbour.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-sashes
Half-ports fitted with glass for the admission of light into cabins.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-shackles
The rings to the ports.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-sills
In ship-building, pieces of timber put horizontally between the framing to form the top and bottom o...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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port-tackles
Those falls which haul up and suspend the lower-deck ports, so that since the admiralty order for us...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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raft-port
A large square hole, framed and cut through the buttocks of some ships, immediately under the counte...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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sally-port
An opening cut in the glacis of a place to afford free egress to the troops in case of a sortie. Als...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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sea-port
A haven near the sea, not situated up a river.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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Anthony's Fire
·- ·see Saint Anthony's Fire, under <<Saint>>.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Ash-fire
·noun A low fire used in chemical operations.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Back fire
·add. ·- A fire started ahead of a forest or prairie fire to burn only against the wind, so that whe...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Back-fire
·add. ·vi To have or experience a back fire or back fires;
— said of an internal-combustion engine....
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Elmo's fire
·- ·see <<Corposant>>; also Saint Elmo's Fire, under <<Saint>>.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire beetle
·- A very brilliantly luminous beetle (Pyrophorus noctilucus), one of the elaters, found in Central ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire-fanged
·adj Injured as by fire; burned;
— said of manure which has lost its goodness and acquired an ashy ...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire-new
·adj Fresh from the forge; bright; quite new; brand-new.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Fire-set
·noun A set of fire irons, including, commonly, tongs, shovel, and poker.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Knobbling fire
·- A bloomery fire. ·see <<Bloomery>>.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Pin-fire
·add. ·adj Having a firing pin to explode the cartridge; as, a pin-fire rifle.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Rapid-fire
·add. ·adj ·Alt. of Rapid-firing.
...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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Rim-fire
·add. ·adj Having the percussion fulminate in a rim surrounding the base, distinguished from center-...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
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fire priggers
Villains who rob at fires under pretence of assisting in removing the goods.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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fire ship
A wench who has the venereal disease.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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fire shovel
He or she when young, was fed with a fire shovel; a saying of persons with wide mouths.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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spit fire
A violent, pettish, or passionate person.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
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bush-fire
n.
forests and grass on fire in hotsummers.
1868. C. Dilke, `Greater Britain,' vol. ii. part iii. ...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
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fire-stick
n.
name given to thelighted stick which the Australian natives frequently carryabout, when moving f...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
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fire-tree
n.
a tree of New Zealand; anothername for Pohutukawa (q.v.). For QueenslandFire-tree, see Tulip-tre...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
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to fire away
To begin; to go on. An expression borrowed from the language of soldiers and sailors.
A well-known ...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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fire-cracker
A little paper cylinder filled with powder or combustible matter, imported from China. It receives i...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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fire-new
New from the forge; brand-new.--Johnson. This old and nearly obsolete expression is sometimes used b...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
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cold fire
a fire laid ready for lighting. York.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
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shel fire
electric sparks, often seen on clothes at night. Kent.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
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fire-elding
The word Fire is redundant; for Elding itself means fuel.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
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fire-flaughts
lightning, or the northern lights. N.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
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fire-potter
a poker. Lane.
...
A glossary of provincial and local words used in England by Francis Grose
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concentrated fire
The bringing the whole or several guns to bear on a single point.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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curved fire
A name coming into use with the increasing application of the fire of heavy and elongated shells to ...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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direct fire
One of the five varieties into which artillerists usually divide horizontal fire (which see).
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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enfilade fire
Is that which sweeps a line of works or men from one end to the other; it is on land nearly the equi...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-flaire
See fiery-flaw
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-arms
Every description of arms that discharge missiles by gunpowder, from the heaviest cannon to a pistol...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-arrows
Missiles in olden times carrying combustibles; much used in the sea-fights of the middle ages.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-away
Go on with your remarks.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-ball
In meteorology, a beautiful phenomenon seen at times, the origin of which is as yet imperfectly acco...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-balls
Are used for destroying vessels run aground, and firing buildings. They are made of a composition of...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-bare
An old term from the Anglo-Saxon for beacon.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-bars
The range fronting a steam-boiler.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-bill
The distribution of the officers and crew in case of the alarm of fire, a calamity requiring judicio...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-booms
Long spars swung out from a ship's side to prevent the approach of fire-ships, fire-stages, or vesse...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-box
A space crossing the whole front of the boiler over the furnace doors, opposite the smoke-box.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-buckets
Canvas, leather, or wood buckets for quarters, each fitted with a sinnet laniard of regulated length...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-door
An access to the fire-place of an engine.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-drake
A meteor, or the Corpo Santo. Also, a peculiar fire-work, which Shakspeare in Henry VIII. thus menti...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-eater
One notoriously fond of being in action; much humbled by iron-clads.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-flaughts
The aurora borealis, or northern lights.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-hearth
The security base of the galley-range and all its conveniences.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-hoops
A combustible invented by the knights of Malta to throw among their besiegers, and afterwards used i...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-lock
Formerly the common name for a musket; the fire-arm carried by a foot-soldier, marine, or small-arm ...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-rafts
Timber constructions bearing combustible matters, used by the Chinese to destroy an enemy's vessel.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-rails
See rails.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-roll
A peculiar beat of the drum to order people to their stations on an alarm of fire. Summons to quarte...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-screens
Pieces of fear-nought, a thick woollen felt put round the hatchways in action.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-ship
A vessel filled with combustible materials, and fitted with grappling-irons, to hook and set fire to...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-swab
The bunch of rope-yarns sometimes secured to the tompion, saturated with water to cool the gun in ac...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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fire-works
See pyrotechny.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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galling-fire
A sustained discharge of cannon, or small arms, which by its execution greatly annoys the enemy.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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grazing-fire
That which sweeps close to the surface it defends.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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gun-fire
The morning or evening guns, familiarly termed "the admiral falling down the hatchway."
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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hang-fire
When the priming burns without igniting the cartridge, or the charge does not rapidly ignite after p...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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horizontal fire
From artillery, is that in which the piece is laid either direct on the object, or with but small el...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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plunging fire
A pitching discharge of shot from a higher level, at such an angle that the shot do not ricochet.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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vertical fire
In artillery, that directed upward at such an angle as that it will fall vertically, or nearly so, t...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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Port-Arthur Plum
See plum, native.
...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
-
Port-Jackson Fig
n. See fig-tree.
...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
-
Port-Jackson Shark
Heterodontus phillipii,Lacep., family Cestraciontidae; called also the Shell-grinder.
1882. Rev. J....
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
-
Port-Jackson Thrush
n.
the best known birdamong the Australian Shrike-thrushes (q.v.), Colluricincla harmonica, Lath.; ...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
-
Port-Macquarie Pine
See pine.
...
Dictionary of Australasian Words Phrases and Usages by Edward E. Morris
-
port egmont fowls
See egmont
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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hard-a-port!
The order so to place the tiller as to bring the rudder over to the starboard-side of the stern-post...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
helm-port transom
The piece of timber placed across the lower counter, withinside the height of the helm-port, and bol...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
port-piece chamber
A paterero for loading a port-piece at the breech.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
Rapid-fire mount
·add. ·- A mount permitting easy and quick elevation or depression and training of the gun, and fitt...
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language
-
Flame of fire
Is the chosen symbol of the holiness of God (Ex. 3:2; Rev. 2:18), as indicating "the intense, all-co...
Easton's Bible Dictionary
-
Fire Ball Alley
See Partridge Court.
...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Fire Ball court
East out of Houndsditch. In Portsoken Ward (25 Eliz. 1583) (Lond. Inq. p.m. III. p. 64) to O.S. 25 i...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Fire Ball Court
Near First (Aldermanbury) Postern, London Wall (Strype, ed. 1755-Boyle, 1799).
Not named in the map...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Fire of London
In 1666, from September 2nd to 6th.
Commenced at the house of a baker in Pudding Lane, near London ...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Sun Fire Office
See Bank Buildings1, Cornhill.
...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
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to fire a slug
To drink a dram.
...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
-
hell fire dick
The Cambridge driver of the Telegraph. The favorite companion of the University fashionables, and th...
Dictionary of The Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose
-
elmo's fire, st.
See compasant.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire, loss by
Is within the policy of insurance, whether it be by accident, or by the fault of the master or marin...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-and-lights
Nickname of the master-at-arms.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
fire-hearth-carline
The timber let in under the beams on which the fire-hearth stands, with pillars underneath, and choc...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
repeating fire-arm
One by which a number of charges, previously inserted, may be fired off in rapid succession, or afte...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
bar of a port
or bar of a harbour
An accumulated shoal or bank of sand, shingle, gravel, or other uliginous subs...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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captain of the port
The captain of the port is probably better explained by referring to that situation at Gibraltar. He...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
pushing for a port
Carrying all sail to arrive quickly.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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put into port, to
To enter an intermediate or any port in the course of a voyage, usually from stress of weather.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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riding a port-last
With lower yards on the gunwales.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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running-down the port
A method practised in the ruder state of navigation, when the longitude was very doubtful, by sailin...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
Burnt in the Fire 1666.
Not further identified.
...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
false fire, blue flames
A composition of combustibles filled into a wooden tube, which, upon being set fire to, burns with a...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
Port of London Authority's Warehouses
At the northern boundary of Portsoken Ward and extending into Bishopsgate Ward Without (P.O. Directo...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
any port in a storm
signifies contentment with whatever may betide.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
-
sole of a gun-port
The lower part of it, more properly called port-sill.
...
The Sailor's Word-Book
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Hand in Hand Fire Office
At No. 1 Bridge Street, Blackfriars, on the east side (Elmes, 1831).
Est. 1696 in Angel Court, Snow...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
Phoenix Assurance Co., Fire Offlce
On the south side of Lombard Street at the northeast corner of Abchurch Lane at No.19 (P.O. Director...
A Dictionary of London by Henry A Harben.
-
to fire into the wrong flock
is a metaphorical expression used at the West, denoting that one has mistaken his object, as when a ...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.
-
to have one's fat in the fire
is to have one's plans frustrated. A vulgar expression borrowed from the vocabulary of the kitchen.
...
Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.