Sailing/Catalogs
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Nomenclature (Terms)
- abeam
- in a line approximately at right angle to the ship’s length
- abaft
- further toward the back of the boat
- aft
- near, toward or at the stern
- athwartships
- in the direction at right angles to fore and aft
- batten
- narrow long pieces of wood, metal or fibreglass which help keep the aft side of a fore-and-aft sail flat. They usually fit into slots in the leech.
- beat
- sailing upwind on a close-hauled point of sail.
- blocks
- pulleys and lines run through them
- bolt rope
- a rope sewn in to the luff of a sail. If on the mainsail, the bolt rope is fed in to a groove in the mast.
- boom
- a spar which holds the top of a rectangular sail up or (usually) pulls the bottom of a triangular sail down
- boom vang
- see "vang."
- bow
- forward part of a vessel
- catamaran
- a vessel with two hulls
- centerboard
- a board which is lowered through the center of small sailboats to reduce the amount of sideways movement of the boat
- clew
- 1. aft bottom corner of a triangular sail
- 2. bottom corners of a rectangular sail
- de-rig
- to remove sailing gear from the boat after sailing. See also: "rig"
- deck
- fall off
- turn a sailing vessel further away from the wind
- foot
- bottom edge of a sail
- fore
- in the direction toward the front of the vessel
- fore-and-aft
- in the direction running from the bow to the stern of the vessel
- halyard
- line used to pull up something, such as a sail, flag or boom
- head
- 1. top corner of a triangular sail
- 2. top edge of a rectangular sail
- 3. toilet (on a vessel)
- head up
- turn a sailing vessel further away from the wind
- heel
- sideways rotation of a boat (from upright) due to wind pressure on the sail, rigging and hull, or due to the boat turning. (Compare with roll.)
- hull
- main body of a vessel, on which mast(s), rudder(s) and other items are fixed
- jib
- triangular sail used to channel wind around another sail in order to increase its efficiency
- jibe
- cause the boom to change sides when the wind is coming from astern
- keel
- 1. "backbone" of a hull along its bottom
- 2. on large monohulls, a keel extends down from the main part of the hull and has considerable mass (to reduce the likelihood of the vessel capsizing)
- ketch
- two-masted sailing vessel where the mizzen mast is slightly smaller than the main mast and the mizzen mast is forward of the rudder post
- leech
- 1. aft edge of a triangular sail
- 2. vertical edges of a rectangular sail
- leeward
- (pronounced "looard") further away from the wind (than another object). Compare with "windward".
- line
- most ropes on ships and boats are called "lines." Some of the types of lines include "sheets", "halyards" and those used for mooring.
- luff
- 1. forward edge of triangular sail
- 2. when a sail starts flapping because the it (or its jib) is trimmed to tightly (too close to the centre of the boat)
- luff tape
- mast
- (approximately) vertical spar which (usually) holds up a sail or boom(s)
- mizzen
- most aft mast, sail or boom of a multi-masted boat, providing that mast/sail is not taller than the others.
- monohull
- vessel with one hull
- outhaul
- pitch
- back-and-forth rotation of the boat from forward and backward
- port
- side of the vessel (or direction) which is on the left (or toward the left) when facing forward
- quarter
- directions approximately 45 degrees either side from directly aft
- rig
- to prepare the sailboat, sails, lines, sheets, etc before sailing. See also: "de-rig"
- rigging
- totality of spars and lines used to hold up and control sails
- roll
- back-and-forth rotation of the boat from side to side
- running rigging
- rigging which moves, e.g. a sheet
- schooner
- multi-mast sailing vessel where the mast furthest aft is no shorter than any other mast.
- sheet
- line running from the clew or boom (if on a triangular sail) to control the position of the sail
- shroud
- unmoving piece of rope or line which reduces a mast's movement in the athwartship direction
- spar
- stiff pole of some kind, e.g. a mast, a boom, a whisker pole
- spinnaker
- a large (approximately) triangular sail used to catch a log of wind (usually) when the wind is abaft the beam. The spinnaker is also known as "the kite," or "the shoot."
- standing rigging
- rigging that does not move, e.g. a mast
- starboard
- the side of the vessel (or direction) which is on the right (or toward the right) when facing forward
- stay
- an unmoving piece of line or rope which reduces a mast's movement in the fore-and-aft direction. The forestay is forward, reduces mast movement aft. The aft stay, if it exists, reduces mast movement forward.
- stern
- the back of the vessel
- tack
- 1. (n) the front corner of a triangular sail
- 2. (n) an indication of which side the wind is coming from and the side of the boat the boom is on, e.g. a "port tack" indicates the wind is coming from the port side and the boom is on the starboard side
- 3. (v) cause the boom to change sides when the wind is coming from ahead
- 4. (v) go for a time on one tack, then change to the other, ongoing, zig-zagging to reach a destination upwind
- telltail
- lightweight yarn, audio tape or similar material attached to a sail to observe the airflow over the sail
- trimaran
- a vessel with three hulls
- vang
- a line and/or blocks which hold down a boom
- yawl
- a two-masted sailing vessel where the mizzen mast is considerably smaller than the main mast and the mizzen mast is aft of the rudder post
- whisker pole
- a spar which holds a jib or spinnaker clew out from the boat so it can catch more wind
- windward
- further toward the wind (than another object)
- wing-in-wing
- when the mainsail and the jib/spinnaker are on opposite sides of the boat. Most often occurs when the vessel has the wind directly astern.