Ships
366. Ships
See also 399. TRAVEL ; 408. VEHICLES
- barratry
- Law. an act of fraud by a master or crew at the expense of the owners of a ship or the owners of its cargo. Also spelled barretry. —barratrous, adj.
- bottomry
- the pledging of a ship as security for a loan; if the ship is lost the debt is canceled.
- cabotage
- the act of navigating or trading along a coast.
- demurrage
- 1. the delay of a ship at mooring beyond the time stipulated for unloading or other purposes.
- 2. the charge levied for such delay.
- flotsam
- material floating on the sea, especially debris or goods from ship-wrecks. Cf. jetsam .
- jetsam, jetsom
- 1. part of a ship’s cargo thrown overboard, as to lighten the load in the event of danger.
- 2. such cargo when it is washed ashore.
- 3. anything which is discarded. Cf. flotsam .
- lodemanage
- Obsolete, the skill or art of the pilot; pilotage.
- lodesman
- Obsolete, a ship’s pilot.
- loxodrome
- a rhumb line or curve on the surface of a sphere intersecting all meridians at the same angle; hence, the course of a ship or aircraft following a constant compass direction. —loxodromic, adj.
- loxodromics, loxodromy
- the art, science, or practice of sailing obliquely across lines of longitude at a constant bearing to them. —loxodromic, adj.
- naumachia, naumachy
- 1. a mock sea fight, as in ancient Rome.
- 2. the place where such fights were conducted.
- naupathia
- seasickness.
- nauropometer
- Rare. an apparatus for measuring the inclination of a heeling or listing ship.
- nauscopy
- the art, sometimes pretended, of being able to sight ships or land at great distances.
- pallograph
- an instrument for recording the vibrations of a steamship. —pallographic, adj.
- pharology
- the technique or practice of guiding ships by means of signal lights, as in lighthouses.
- pilotage
- 1. the act of piloting.
- 2. the skill or expertise of a pilot. See also 131. DUES and PAYMENT .
- plunderage
- 1. the embezzling of goods on board ship.
- 2. the goods embezzled.
- pratique
- permission given to a ship to do business with a port once quarantine and other regulations have been complied with.
- prisage
- 1. the former privilege of the English monarch to receive two tuns of wine from every ship importing twenty tuns or more.
- 2. Also called butlerage . a duty of two shillings on every tun imported by foreign merchants.
- 3. (in England) the Crown’s share of merchandise seized lawfully as a prize at sea.
- salvage
- 1. the recovery of a ship or its contents or cargo after damage or sinking.
- 2. the material recovered and the compensation to those who recover it.
- 3. the rescue and use of any found or discarded material.
- spoliation
- the act of seizing neutral ships with government permission in time of war. See also 81. CHURCH ; 391. THEFT .
Cite this article
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ASK THE GLOBE
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 3/23/1998; 310 words
; ...friendship, books." It was attributed to J. Thomson. Who is J. Thomson, and where can I find out more about this person? C.B., Chelmsford A. James Thomson (1700-1748) was a Scottish poet and contemporary of literary...
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New light on David Mallet.
Magazine article from: ANQ; 6/22/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...recent years (see Gerrard). James Sambrook's study of one of the...half of the eighteenth century, James Thomson 1700-1748: A Life (1991), testifies to...eighteenth-century England. Although Thomson and his literary productions are...
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Comment: Our country and our culture
Magazine article from: The Hudson Review; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...POEM SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF SIR ISAAC NEWTON," James Thomson (1700-1748) imagines the apotheosis of the scientist amid...Washington, D.C., I found myself thinking of James Thomson. Although his poetic idiom is antiquated, Thomson...
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Gadfly - From froth blowers to hornswogglers
Newspaper article from: The Northern Echo; 7/2/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...elegant sufficiency? was coined by the Scottish poet James Thomson (1700-1748) though it is by no means his great claim to fame. Thomson, and not many people may know this, also wrote...
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A Time to Every Purpose: The Four Seasons in American Culture.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Antioch Review; 6/22/2004; ; 637 words
; ...American visual and literary arts, Kammen first sketches their European background. Works like The Seasons by James Thomson (1700-1748) "enjoyed considerable popularity in the young republic" but lost favor as the new nation grew less interested...
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Forgotten birthday celebrations for genius behind 'Rule Britannia'
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 9/6/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...years. But even Thomson's best known...later this year, Thomson's works and style...biographer, Professor James Sambrook, who believes Thomson should command...after his death in 1748. Fted by Frederick...on 11 September 1700 in the Borders...
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The List
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 9/11/1994; 558 words
; ...Wallace at Stirling Bridge. 1700: James Thomson, the poet and playwright...artist J M W Turner. Thomson was born in Roxburgh and...Notoriously idle, in later life Thomson received a royal pension...sinecure. He died in 1748 and is buried in Richmond...
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Tribute to Scots writer restored
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 2/8/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...structure with a bust of Thomson and an imposing sculpture...Address to the Shade of Thomson, was read at the...skilled stonemason. James Carter, the project manager, said: "Thomson celebrated the natural...Kelso in September 1700 before the family...where he died in 1748. ...
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James Thomson
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
James Thomson The British poet James Thomson (1700-1748) is chiefly remembered for his celebrated...Philadelphia: R. West, 1977. Sambrook, James, James Thomson, 1700-1748: a life, Oxford: Clarendon Press; New York...
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Thomson, James
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Thomson, James (1700–48), born at Ednam on...was performed the masque of Alfred by Thomson and Mallet, containing ‘...Britannia’, probably written by Thomson. In 1748 he published The Castle of Indolence...
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