Advertisement
Advertisement
barkentine
[ bahr-kuhn-teen ]
noun
- a sailing vessel having three or more masts, square-rigged on the foremast and fore-and-aft-rigged on the other masts.
barkentine
/ ˈ²úÉ‘Ë°ìÉ™²ÔËŒ³Ù¾±Ë²Ô /
noun
- a sailing ship of three or more masts rigged square on the foremast and fore-and-aft on the others British spellingsbarquentinebarquantine
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of barkentine1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of barkentine1
Example Sentences
With this bankroll, he was able to purchase and outfit a three-masted, coal-powered barkentine called Polaris from a Norwegian firm that specialized in polar vessels.
But now the exhibition space has reopened with a tidy display of artifacts that show visitors how the port shaped the city in the days when all hands knew the difference between a barkentine and a brigantine.
Later, it was rigged as a schooner, another type of tall ship that took fewer crew members to sail than the barkentine, Georgann Wachter said.
It began life as a barkentine, a type of tall ship plying the waters of the Great Lakes.
“The following vessels are now loading or are loaded and ready to sail: “Bark Columbia, for San Francisco, 700,000 feet; ship Aristomene, for Valparaiso, 1,450,000 feet; ship Earl Burgess, for Amsterdam, 1,250,000 feet; bark Mercury, for San Francisco, 1,000,000 feet; ship Corolla, for Valparaiso, 1,000,000 feet; barkentine Katie Flickinger, for Fiji Islands, 550,000 feet; bark Matilda, for Honolulu, 650,000 feet; bark E. Ramilla, for Valparaiso, 700,000 feet; ship Beechbank, for Valparaiso, 2,000,000 feet.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse