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Place to hold mutineers
Answer for the clue "Place to hold mutineers ", 4 letters:
brig
Alternative clues for the word brig
Usage examples of brig.
We had the good fortune to take a large ship laden with barilla, and a brig with tobacco and wine.
I was at home on a brig, whether full-rigged or jackass: consequently I was equally easy on a schooner or a barkentine or a ship.
Tubby cargo bottoms were at the center, with lean brigs and barkentines flanking.
When the barque held on her course, another hail bellowed from the brig, following which her bow fell off again to larboard.
To leeward were a barque and a brig, and far back on their lee quarter, very faint, a sail.
I had not wished the barque for myself, I would not have fought this war brig, and so lost several men and suffered grave damage.
But since the breeze is dead contrary at present and likely to remain so until after sunset, I shall stand in, say farewell to the brigs and schooners, and then give those scoundrels in the town and the barracoons a salute that will put the fear of God into them.
At a guess, the hot, lazy days at the pirate camps on Grand Terre looked different from the barracoons than they did from the deck of a pirate brig.
His goal was the inn, and he had been advised in Berwick to cross the Yonder by what was known as the Roman Brig, and then to bend right through a firwood, to cross a strip of moor, to traverse the village of Yonder, and so find the inn a mile beyond on the hill above the stream.
The Old Laughing Lady is a schooner that can outsail that fat old brig on any sea, in any weather!
Picard stood slightly removed from the chaos in the starboard brig while Lieutenant Peart tried to rein in the prisoners, who were engaged in a frenzy of finger-pointing.
He ran his peroqua alongside of her, and found that she was a brig under the Portuguese flag, having, however, but two Portuguese on board, the rest of the crew being natives.
It was under the action of this cylinder, charged with some explosive substance, nitro-glycerine, picrate, or some other material of the same nature, that the water of the channel had been raised like a dome, the bottom of the brig crushed in, and she had sunk instantly, the damage done to her hull being so considerable that it was impossible to refloat her.
Gunning spread everything, and the bulky brig, from slopping like a wicker basket full offish, dug in her nose, and then her arse, and surged.
And then he saw them, two gaff-rigged single-masted ships with a brig between them, slicing across the wind to the south in an attempt to round Strumble Head.