释义 |
Definition of barque in English: barque(also bark) nounbɑːkbɑrk 1A sailing ship, typically with three masts, in which the foremast and mainmast are square-rigged and the mizzenmast is rigged fore and aft. (尤指前桅和主桅挂横帆、后桅挂竖帆的)三桅帆船 Example sentencesExamples - The harbour setting was ideal with HMAS Tobruk and the barque Endeavour positioned either side of the parade, representing the past and present.
- The ship was a threemasted barque and had two coal-fired steam engines.
- For the second consecutive year the Jubilee Sailing Trust will be participating in the ARC with their barque Tenacious, the largest wooden tall ship to have been built in the last century.
- On 13 August 1840 the barque London left Plymouth with Frederic, his wife Margaret, and their three children on board.
- On 29 April 1834, caught in the grips of west-sou-wester gale, the barque Harriet washed up on a beach not far from Rahotu.
- The three - masted barque took to the water as a bulk cargo carrier.
- Like a sailing barque stuck fast in the Doldrums, I lurch slowly in the swell, holding my breath and waiting for a wind to fill the sails.
- The difference between a barque and a ship is the way the aftmost mast is rigged.
- But Fortuna propelled her forward without answering and before she knew it she was planted safely on the deck of the barque.
- His square-rigged ship with the cross and bones flying from the mizzenmast was a feared sight in the eyes of captains of merchant barques.
- In sailing parlance, she is known as a three-masted barque.
- The barque Endeavour (the replica of Captain James Cook's ship) arrived in July and then there was The Big Day Out, a port open day, a month or so later.
- With Capt. Bill Pinkney at the helm, Amistad held a place of honor, third in line behind the U.S. Coast Guard barque Eagle and a replica of the War of 1812 brigantine Niagara.
- Two centuries on, the ‘New Trafalgar Dispatch’ was placed on board the Jubilee Sailing Trust's barque Lord Nelson in Portsmouth at the International Festival of the Sea.
- The visit of the barques, brigantines and schooners also seemed to drive off some of the tourism malaise created by a July shrouded in fog, damp and rain.
- The sea reflected our good fortune in hues of glassy green, turquoise and cobalt blue and into this unearthly vision we quietly launched our sailing barque.
- Typically there are wooden sailing barques with rather basic facilities, or spacious yet ethnic sailing schooners such as sy Pindito, locally built in Kalimantan in Pinisi-style from ironwood.
- The latest vessel to confirm its involvement is the 295-feet long Eagle, a three-masted sailing barque with 21,350 square feet of sail and five miles of rigging.
- She also adds gems of family interest, such as the story of Captain William Mein Smith, a surveyor and artist who arrived at Port Nicholson on the barque Cuba in 1839.
- A symbol of earlier, more dangerous times, it's the anchor from the barque Harriet that ran aground off the Okahu River in 1834.
- 1.1literary A boat.
〈诗/文〉轻舟 Example sentencesExamples - The barked torrent of words flowed over me: a cataract of verbiage with unknown phrases sticking up like sharp rocks to confound the frail barque of my self-confidence and perhaps overwhelm it.
- Who travelest over the heavens in thy barque at the uprising of the sun.
- As she entered the water, even seaside frolickers enlarged the circle and joined the chanting, which peaked with a final "VIVA CARMELITA!" as the drenched bearers hoisted her up into a garlanded barque.
- The lesser barques and rowboats that move about in the background are those of Religion.
- Bishop Peter J. Lee had for many years been viewed as a moderate, tilting to this side or that in order to keep his little barque afloat.
Synonyms boat, sailing boat, ship, yacht, craft, watercraft
OriginMiddle English: from Old French, probably from Provençal barca, from late Latin barca 'ship's boat'. bark from Old English: Dogs have always barked, so it is not surprising that bark is a prehistoric word. If someone's bark is worse than their bite they are not as ferocious as they appear. To bark at the moon meaning ‘to make a fuss with no effect’, is first recorded in the 17th century. To bark up the wrong tree is from 19th-century America. People have been barking or barking mad since the 1930s. The bark of a tree is possibly related to the name of the birch tree (Old English). Bark or barque (Middle English) is also an old-fashioned word for a boat from Latin barca ‘ship's boat’, from which we get embark (mid 16th century).
Rhymesarc, ark, Bach, bark, Braque, Clark, clerk, dark, embark, hark, impark, Iraq, Ladakh, Lamarck, lark, macaque, marc, mark, marque, narc, nark, Newark, park, quark, sark, shark, snark, spark, stark, Vlach Definition of barque in US English: barque(also bark) nounbɑrkbärk 1A sailing ship, typically with three masts, in which the foremast and mainmast are square-rigged and the mizzenmast is rigged fore-and-aft. (尤指前桅和主桅挂横帆、后桅挂竖帆的)三桅帆船 Example sentencesExamples - She also adds gems of family interest, such as the story of Captain William Mein Smith, a surveyor and artist who arrived at Port Nicholson on the barque Cuba in 1839.
- For the second consecutive year the Jubilee Sailing Trust will be participating in the ARC with their barque Tenacious, the largest wooden tall ship to have been built in the last century.
- With Capt. Bill Pinkney at the helm, Amistad held a place of honor, third in line behind the U.S. Coast Guard barque Eagle and a replica of the War of 1812 brigantine Niagara.
- The three - masted barque took to the water as a bulk cargo carrier.
- On 13 August 1840 the barque London left Plymouth with Frederic, his wife Margaret, and their three children on board.
- Like a sailing barque stuck fast in the Doldrums, I lurch slowly in the swell, holding my breath and waiting for a wind to fill the sails.
- The latest vessel to confirm its involvement is the 295-feet long Eagle, a three-masted sailing barque with 21,350 square feet of sail and five miles of rigging.
- His square-rigged ship with the cross and bones flying from the mizzenmast was a feared sight in the eyes of captains of merchant barques.
- The visit of the barques, brigantines and schooners also seemed to drive off some of the tourism malaise created by a July shrouded in fog, damp and rain.
- The barque Endeavour (the replica of Captain James Cook's ship) arrived in July and then there was The Big Day Out, a port open day, a month or so later.
- But Fortuna propelled her forward without answering and before she knew it she was planted safely on the deck of the barque.
- Two centuries on, the ‘New Trafalgar Dispatch’ was placed on board the Jubilee Sailing Trust's barque Lord Nelson in Portsmouth at the International Festival of the Sea.
- In sailing parlance, she is known as a three-masted barque.
- A symbol of earlier, more dangerous times, it's the anchor from the barque Harriet that ran aground off the Okahu River in 1834.
- On 29 April 1834, caught in the grips of west-sou-wester gale, the barque Harriet washed up on a beach not far from Rahotu.
- The sea reflected our good fortune in hues of glassy green, turquoise and cobalt blue and into this unearthly vision we quietly launched our sailing barque.
- The ship was a threemasted barque and had two coal-fired steam engines.
- The harbour setting was ideal with HMAS Tobruk and the barque Endeavour positioned either side of the parade, representing the past and present.
- The difference between a barque and a ship is the way the aftmost mast is rigged.
- Typically there are wooden sailing barques with rather basic facilities, or spacious yet ethnic sailing schooners such as sy Pindito, locally built in Kalimantan in Pinisi-style from ironwood.
- 1.1literary A boat.
〈诗/文〉轻舟 Example sentencesExamples - The lesser barques and rowboats that move about in the background are those of Religion.
- Who travelest over the heavens in thy barque at the uprising of the sun.
- As she entered the water, even seaside frolickers enlarged the circle and joined the chanting, which peaked with a final "VIVA CARMELITA!" as the drenched bearers hoisted her up into a garlanded barque.
- Bishop Peter J. Lee had for many years been viewed as a moderate, tilting to this side or that in order to keep his little barque afloat.
- The barked torrent of words flowed over me: a cataract of verbiage with unknown phrases sticking up like sharp rocks to confound the frail barque of my self-confidence and perhaps overwhelm it.
Synonyms boat, sailing boat, ship, yacht, craft, watercraft
OriginMiddle English: from Old French, probably from Provençal barca, from late Latin barca ‘ship's boat’. |