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coracle
[ kawr-uh-kuhl, kor- ]
noun
- a small, round, or very broad boat made of wickerwork or interwoven laths covered with a waterproof layer of animal skin, canvas, tarred or oiled cloth, or the like: used in Wales, Ireland, and parts of western England.
coracle
/ ˈ°ìÉ’°ùÉ™°ìÉ™±ô /
noun
- a small roundish boat made of waterproofed hides stretched over a wicker frame
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of coracle1
Example Sentences
On the beach, men and women talked in the lilting tones of spoken Vietnamese while repairing circular coracles, the basket-like boats that have been used here for centuries.
He writes: “On these magic shores children at play are for ever beaching their coracles. We too have been there; we can still hear the sound of the surf, though we shall land no more.â€
The experience was so fulfilling I made a second trip the following winter, travellingthrough Wales in a coracle.
Their boats were coracles woven of reed, and it was a brave sailor who would go as far as Gosk or Kornay in such a craft.
The last coracle shed in England, where the circular boats were made for use along the River Severn, is to be restored and opened to the public.
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