Windlass

Webster's Dictionary of the English Language

·noun A winding and circuitous way; a roundabout course; a shift.

II. Windlass ·vi To take a roundabout course; to work warily or by indirect means.

III. Windlass ·vt & ·vi To raise with, or as with, a windlass; to use a windlass.

IV. Windlass ·noun An apparatus resembling a winch or windlass, for bending the bow of an arblast, or crossbow.

V. Windlass ·noun A machine for raising weights, consisting of a horizontal cylinder or roller moving on its axis, and turned by a crank, lever, or similar means, so as to wind up a rope or chain attached to the weight. In vessels the windlass is often used instead of the capstan for raising the anchor. It is usually set upon the forecastle, and is worked by hand or steam.

Related Words

  • windlass

    [from the Ang.-Sax. windles]. A machine erected in the fore-part of a ship which serves to ride by, ...

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  • crab-windlass

    A light windlass for barges. ...

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  • spanish windlass

    A wooden roller, or heaver, having a rope wound about it, through the bight of which an iron bolt is...

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  • windlass-bitts

    See carrick-bitts. ...

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  • windlass-chocks

    Those pieces of oak or elm fastened inside the bows of small craft, to support the ends of the windl...

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  • windlass-ends

    Two pieces which continue the windlass outside the bitt-heads. ...

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  • windlass-lining

    Pieces of hard wood fitted round the main-piece of a windlass to prevent chafing, and also to enable...

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