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Sail rope
Answer for the clue "Sail rope ", 7 letters:
halyard
Alternative clues for the word halyard
Word definitions for halyard in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ A broken spinnaker halyard put paid to Law's spirited last-minute effort, while Peters failed to consolidate his position. ▪ A hundred masts were playing the halyard concerto at full volume. ▪ Then he was on to the cabin top ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
alt. (context nautical English) A rope used to raise or lower a sail, flag, spar or yard. n. (context nautical English) A rope used to raise or lower a sail, flag, spar or yard.
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
In sailing , a halyard or halliard is a line ( rope ) that is used to hoist a ladder , sail , flag or yard . The term halyard comes from the phrase, 'to haul yards'. Halyards, like most other parts of the running rigging , were classically made of natural ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"rope for hoisting sails," 1610s, from Middle English halier "a halyard" (late 14c.), also "a carrier, porter" (late 13c. in surnames), from halen "to haul" (see hale (v.)). Spelling influenced by yard "long beam that supports a sail" (see yard (n.2)).
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Halyard \Hal"yard\ (h[a^]l"y[~e]rd), n. [Hale, v. t. + yard.] (Naut.) A rope or tackle for hoisting or lowering yards, sails, flags, etc. [Written also halliard , haulyard .]
Usage examples of halyard.
The hatch cover was already off, and using the main boom held at an angle by the peak halyard, the two chargers were lifted by bellybands, swayed over the side and set in place on the sand.
Then the foretopmen had to slide down swiftly from aloft to haul on the halyards, and as soon as the yard was up, they had to hoist the jibs and staysails.
Uruguayan flags limp on their halyards, spitting a blizzard of tracer, came the merchantmen.
The ends of all the running ropes, with the exception of the signal halyards and poop-down-haul, were rove through snatch-blocks, and led to the capstan or windlass, so that not a yard was braced or a sail set without the assistance of machinery.
Harry got to the top of the mast and rove the halyards through after some hardship, so that it now works easy and well.
Suspended from his ears were two golden hoops, so large that the sailors called them ringbolts, and would talk of securing the top-sail halyards to them.
The low, sodded, and verdant ramparts, the sombre palisades, now darker than ever with water, the roof of a house or two, the tall, solitary flagstaff, with its halyards blown steadily out into a curve that appeared traced in immovable lines in the air, were all soon to be seen though no sign of animated life could be discovered.
Time and time again some men had to be shown what to do, even had halyards or braces put into their hands while Tomlin and his assistants scampered from one piece of confusion to another.
As the seamen moved briskly at halyards and braces Bolitho stood by the quarterdeck rail, very conscious of the changed atmosphere which the brief freedom from PelhamMartin's supervision had brought.
Ray, the linguist, listened to and memorized words like spinnaker, mast, bow, stern, aft, tiller, halyard winches, masthead fittings, shrouds, lifelines, stanchions, sheet winch, bow pulpit, coamings, transom, clew outhaul, genoa sheets, mainsail, jib, jibstays, jib sheets, cam cleats and boom vangs.
The rope around his neck and up to a cabin carling, the equivalent of a ceiling joist, had evidently been cut from a topsail halyard, because it was that size of line.
Halyard helped the Shah, who seemed to have been aged and exhausted by the emotional ordeal, into the electric car.
He, in turn, ran a flag up the halyard running to the height of the stem turret.
The headsails sagged even though the wind was little more than a stiff breeze, showing that the forestays were slack and no one had bothered to take up the slack in the halyards as the ropes stretched.
The Halyard was different from most of the gay clubs in Newport’.