Find the word definition

Crossword clues for cringle

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cringle

Cringle \Crin"gle\ (kr[i^][ng]"g'l), n. [Icel. kringla orb; akin to kring around, and to D. kring circle, and to E. cringe, crank.]

  1. A withe for fastening a gate.

  2. (Naut.) An iron or pope thimble or grommet worked into or attached to the edges and corners of a sail; -- usually in the plural. The cringles are used for making fast the bowline bridles, earings, etc.

Wiktionary
cringle

alt. 1 (context nautical English) A short piece of rope, arranged as a grommet around a metal ring, used to attach tackle to a sail etc. 2 A withe for fastening a gate. n. 1 (context nautical English) A short piece of rope, arranged as a grommet around a metal ring, used to attach tackle to a sail etc. 2 A withe for fastening a gate.

WordNet
cringle

n. fastener consisting of a metal ring for lining a small hole to permit the attachment of cords or lines [syn: eyelet, loop, grommet, grummet]

Wikipedia
Cringle

A cringle is an eye through which to pass a rope. In nautical settings, the word refers to a small hole anywhere along the edge or in the corner of a sail, rimmed with stranded cordage and worked into the boltrope. Typically it encloses a metal grommet for reinforcement and to reduce wear. In this context, cringle and grommet coincide enough that the two are sometimes used interchangeably.

Usage examples of "cringle".

In the middle of that length was a spliced-in loop, called a cringle, and fixed to that cringle was one end of a chain, somewhat longer than the river was deep here (as they knew from van Hoek’s soundings) and several hundred pounds in weight.

The new canvas was laid out on the deck, the sheets already reeved into the clews and earing cringles, but it took an hour Of hard, dangerous work before her white canvas was brought down and stowed away, and the sails that were daubed with pitch were hoist to the yards and unfurled.