The Sailor's Word-Book by W. H. Smyth
introduction of detonating and friction-tubes. (_See_ TUBES.)
1842 words | Chapter 7
QUILTING. A kind of coating formed of sinnet, strands of rope, &c.,
outside any vessel containing water. Also, the giving a man a beating
with a rope's end.
QUINCUNX. Forming a body of men chequerwise. A method of surveying a
coast by five vessels in quincunx was proposed by A. Dalrymple to the
admiralty, when that board would not have allowed of the employment of
one.
QUINK. A name in the Orkneys for the golden-eyed duck, _Anas clangula_.
QUINTAL. A commercial weight of a hundred pounds.
QUINTANE. An early military sport, to try the agility of our country
youth.
QUINTE. The fifth guard in fencing.
QUISCHENS. The old term for _cuisses_, the pieces of armour which
protected the thighs.
QUITTANCE. A release or discharge in writing for a sum of money or other
duty, which ought to be paid or done on the ship's account.
QUOD. Durance, prison.
QUOIN. A wooden wedge adjusted to support the breech of a gun, so as to
give the muzzle the required elevation or depression. Also, one of the
mechanical powers.
QUOINS. Are employed to wedge off casks of liquids from each other, and
steady them, in order that their bilges may not rub at sea, and occasion
leaks.
QUOST. The old spelling of _coast_. See Eliot's _Dictionarie_, 1559.
QUOTA-MEN. Those raised for the navy at enormous expense by Pitt's
quota-bill, in 1795, under bounties of from L20 to L60.
R.
R. In the muster-book means _run_, and is placed against those who have
deserted, or missed three musters.
R.A. _See_ RIGHT ASCENSION.
RABANET, OR RABINET. A small slender piece of ordnance, formerly used
for ships' barricadoes. It had a one-inch bore, which carried about a
half-pound ball.
RABBET, OR REBATE. An angular incision cut longitudinally in a piece of
timber, to receive the ends of a number of planks, to be securely
fastened therein. Thus the ends of the lower planks of a ship's bottom
terminate upon the stem afore, and on the stern-post abaft. The surface
of the garboard streak, whose edge is let into the keel, is in the same
manner level with the side of the keel at the extremities of the vessel.
They are therefore termed stem, stern, or keel rabbets.
RACE. Strong currents producing overfalls, dangerous to small craft.
They may be produced by narrow channels, crossing of tides, or uneven
bottoms. Such are the races of Portland, Alderney, &c. Also, a
mill-race, or tail-course.
RACE, TO. Applies to marking timber with the race-tool.
RACE-HORSE. (_Alca?_) A duck of the South Seas; thus named, says Cook,
for "the great swiftness with which they run on the water." Now called a
steamer.
RACK. The superior stratum of clouds, or that moving rapidly above the
scud. The line in which the clouds are driven by the wind, is called the
rack of the weather. In Shakspeare's beautiful thirty-third sonnet the
sun rises in splendour, but--
"Anon permits the basest clouds to ride
With ugly rack on his celestial face,
And from the forlorn world his visage hide,
Stealing unseen to west with this disgrace."
Also, a frame of timber containing several sheaves, as a fair leader.
Also, various rails for belaying pins.--_To rack._ To seize two ropes
together, with racking or cross-turns.
RACK-BAR. A billet of wood used for twisting the bight of a swifter
round, in order to bind a raft firmly together.
RACK-BLOCK. A range of sheaves cut in one piece of wood, for running
ropes to lead through.
RACK-HURRY. The tram-way on which coal-waggons run to a _hurry_.
RACKING. Spun-yarn or other stuff used to rack two parts of a rope
together.
RACKING A TACKLE OR LANIARD. The fastening two running parts together
with a seizing, so as to prevent it from rendering through the blocks.
RACKING-TURNS. _See_ NIPPERING.
RACK-RIDER. The name of the samlet in northern fisheries, so called
because it generally appears in bad weather.
RADDLE, TO. To interlace; as in making boats' gripes and flat gaskets.
RADE [Fr.] An old spelling of the sea-term _road_. (_See_ ROAD.)
RADIUS. The semi-diameter of a circle, limb of a sextant, &c.
RADIUS-BAR OF PARALLEL MOTION. An intervening lever for guiding the
side-rods of a steam-engine.
RADIUS-VECTOR. An imaginary line joining the centres of the sun and a
planet or comet in any point of its orbit.
RADUS. A term used for the constellation Eridanus.
RAFT. A sort of float formed by an assemblage of casks, planks, or
pieces of timber, fastened together with swifters and raft-dogs side by
side, as well as tier upon tier. The timber and plank with which
merchant ships are laden in the different ports of the Baltic, are
attached together in this manner, in order to float them off to the
shipping; but the rafts of North America are the most gigantic in the
world. Also, a kind of floating bridge of easy construction for the
passage of rivers by troops, &c.
RAFT-DOG. A broad flat piece of iron, having a sharp point at each end,
with the extremities bent at right angles. There are also _dog-hooks_,
having the shoulder bent into a hook, by which the raft-chains are
secured, or suddenly thrown off and released.
RAFTING. Conveying goods by floating, as by raft-chains, lashings, &c.
RAFT-PORT. A large square hole, framed and cut through the buttocks of
some ships, immediately under the counter--or forward between the
breast-hooks of the bow--to load or unload timber.
RAG-BOLTS. Those which are jagged or barbed, to prevent working in their
holes, and to make them hold more securely. The same as _barb-bolts_.
RAILS. Narrow pieces of wood, with mouldings as ornaments, mortised into
the heads of stanchions, or nailed for ornament on several parts of a
ship's upper works.
RAILS OF THE HEAD. Curved pieces of timber extending from the bows on
each side to the continuation of the ship's stem, to support the knee of
the head, &c.
RAILS OF THE STERN. (_See_ STERN-RAILS.)
RAINBOW.
"A rainbow towards night,
Fair weather in sight.
Rainbow at night,
Sailor's delight;
Rainbow in morning,
Sailors, take warning."
RAIN-CLOUD. _See_ NIMBUS.
RAINS. Belts or zones of calms, where heavy rain prevails; they exist
between the north-east and south-east trade-winds, changing their
latitude several degrees, depending on the sun's declination. In India
"the rains" come in with the S.W. monsoon.
RAISE, TO. To make an object subtend a larger angle by approaching it,
which is the foundation of perspective, and an effect increased by the
sphericity of our globe: the opposite of _laying_ (which see).
RAISE A SIEGE, TO. To abandon or cause the abandonment of a siege.
RAISED UPON. When a vessel is heightened in her upper works.
RAISE-NET. A kind of staked net on our northern shores, so called from
rising and falling with the tide.
RAISE OR RISE TACKS AND SHEETS. The lifting the clues of the courses,
previously to bracing round the yards in tacking or wearing.
RAISE THE METAL TO. To elevate the breech, and depress thereby the
muzzle of a gun.
RAISE THE WIND, TO. To make an exertion; to cast about for funds.
RAISING A MOUSE. The process of making a lump on a stay. (_See_ MOUSE.)
RAISING A PURCHASE. The act of disposing certain machines, so that, by
their mutual effects, they may produce sufficient force to overcome the
weight or resistance of the object to which this machinery is applied.
RAKE. The projection of the upper parts of a ship, at both ends, beyond
the extremities of the keel. Also, the deviation of the masts from the
_vertical line of position_, reckoned from the keel forward or aft.
RAKING. Cannonading a ship, so that the shot shall range in the
direction of her whole length between decks, called a raking fire; and
is similar to military enfilading.
RAKISH. Said of a ship when she has the appearance of force and fast
sailing.
RALLYING SQUARE. That formed by skirmishers or dispersed troops when
suddenly menaced by cavalry, each man as he runs in successively placing
himself with his back close against those already formed.
RAM. A long spar, iron-hooped at the ends, used for driving out blocks
from beneath a vessel's keel, and for driving planks an end while only
wedged to the ship's side. Also, a new rating in the navy. (_See_
STEAM-RAM.)
RAMBADE. The elevated platform built across the prow of a galley, for
boarding, &c.
RAMED. The state of a ship on the stocks, when all the frames are set
upon the keel, the stem and stern-post put up, and the whole adjusted by
the ram-line.
RAM-HEAD. An old word for halliard-block.
RAM HOME, TO. To drive home the ammunition in a gun.
RAMMER. A cylindrical block of wood nearly fitting the bore of a cannon,
and fastened on a wooden staff; used in loading to drive home the charge
of a cannon.
RAMP. An oblique or sloping interior road to mount the _terreplein_ of
the rampart.
RAMPART. An artificial embankment surrounding a fortified place, capable
of covering the buildings from view, and of resisting the cannon of an
enemy. Generally having a parapet on its top, and a wall for its front.
RAMPER-EEL. A name of the _lamprey_, _Petromyzon marinus_.
RAM-REEL. Synonymous with _bull-dance_.
RAMROD. In muzzle-loading, is the implement used in charging a piece, to
drive home the powder and shot.
RAMSHACKLE. Out of repair and ungainly; disorderly.
RAN. Yarns coiled on a spun-yarn winch.
RANCE. The strut or support of a Congreve rocket.
RANDAN. A mode of rowing with alternate long and short oars.
RANDOM SHOT. A shot, or _coup perdu_, made when the muzzle is highly
elevated; the utmost range may be at an angle of 45 deg., which is
supposed to carry about ten times as far as the point blank; but
improved gunnery has now put the term out of use.
RANGE. Placed in a line or row; a term hydrographically applied to
hills, as "the coast-range." Also, _galley-range_, or fire-grate.
RANGE, TO. To sail in a parallel direction, and near to; as "we ranged
the coast;" "the enemy came ranging up alongside of us."
RANGE-HEADS. The _windlass-bitts_ (which see).
RANGE OF A GUN. The horizontal distance which it will send a shot, at a
stated elevation, to the point of its first graze. Also, a place where
gun-practice is carried on. Also, a _level range_ implies the gun lying
horizontal. The various positions between this and 45 deg. are called
_intermediate ranges_.
RANGE OF CABLE. A sufficient quantity of cable left slack to allow the
anchor to reach the ground before the cable is checked by the double
turns round the bitts, the object being to let the anchor hook the
bottom quickly, and to prevent the heavy shock which would be caused if
its weight were suddenly brought upon the bitts.
RANGES, HORNED. Pieces of timber containing belaying pins, inside a
ship. Also, pieces of oak placed round the hatchways to contain shot.
RANK. Degree of dignity; officers of the navy rank with those of the
army according to the following table:--
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