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Whaling spear
Answer for the clue "Whaling spear ", 7 letters:
harpoon
Alternative clues for the word harpoon
Word definitions for harpoon in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
The Harpoon is an all-weather, over-the-horizon , anti-ship missile system, developed and manufactured by McDonnell Douglas (now Boeing Defense, Space & Security ). In 2004, Boeing delivered the 7,000th Harpoon unit since the weapon's introduction in 1977. ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A spearlike weapon with a barbed head used in hunting whales and large fish. 2 (context slang English) A harmonic v (context transitive English) To hunt something with a harpoon.
Usage examples of harpoon.
This sort of observation may be important for a flaneur, but it is dreadful for any reader of this book, who probably does not want to know where the remaining harpoons will end up.
In this foreshaft was set the head of the harpoon, of bone, drilled, with a point of sharpened slate.
In moments the harpoon shaft and foreshaft bobbed to the surface, but the bone harpoon head, its line taut, turning the head in the wound, held fast.
The whalers hired the aboriginals to help man the harpoon boats and to trap for furs that could be taken back and sold at highly profitable rates, while the Inuit were, for the first time, exposed to the iron-and-steam-age goods of their employers.
During a flounder gigging trip on a moonless night, he had tried to use the harpoon to gig the flounder exposed in the soft mud flats and sandbars by the light of a lantern on a johnboat.
This runs from the barrel at the stern, down the centre of the boat, to the crutch on the starboard bow where it is spliced to the two harpoons in front of where Hammerhead Jack is seated.
Then Hammerhead Jack, with a shout, delivers the harpoon into its side.
The days continued so mild and fair that they passed seals basking on their backs in the open sea, soaking up the unseasonable winter sun, and so peaceful and contented did they look that no one had the hardheartedness to disturb their slumbers with harpoon or spear.
On the walls, prints of Victorian etchings of life on the island, the natives all done up in Lapp clothes -- huge fur-lined anoraks with fancy stitching -- harpoons in hand, sledges, dogs, whale hunting, church, life.
The radar operator read off ranges and bearing, which were entered into the Mk-117 fire-control director and relayed to the Harpoon missiles in the torpedo tubes, giving them bearing to target and the range at which to switch on their seeker-heads.
Other than the clatter of the cleated seaboots and the screaming of a flock of gulls, the only sound was the clean thunking of steel blades biting into the quivering flesh of the harpooned whale.
And where but from Nantucket, too, did that first adventurous little sloop put forth, partly laden with imported cobblestones--so goes the story-- to throw at the whales, in order to discover when they were nigh enough to risk a harpoon from the bowsprit?
But as perhaps fifty of these whale-bone whales are harpooned for one cachalot, some philosophers of the forecastle have concluded that this positive havoc has already very seriously diminished their battalions.
The would-be backstabber snarled deep in her throat, but both her hands lifted from the harpoon.
The boneheads seemed to have enough mind to be fascinated by the artifacts of the people, yet not enough to make them for themselves: You could buy whatever you wanted from a bonehead for the sake of a mammoth-ivory bead or a carved bone harpoon.