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William Falconer's Dictionary of the Marine |
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Table of Contents
N NAVAL to NO NEARER! NAVAL NAVE-LINE NAVIGATION NAVY NEAPED NEEDLE NETTING NIPPERS NITTLES NO NEARER! NO MANS LAND to NUTS of the anchor Search Contact us |
NIPPERSNIPPERS, (garcettes de tournevire, Fr.) certain pieces of flat braided cordage, used to fasten the cable to the voyal in a ship of war, when the former is drawn into the ship by mechanical powers applied to the latter.These nippers are usually six or eight feet in length, according to the size of the cable; and five or six of them are commonly fastened about the cable and voyal at once, in order to be heaved in by the capstern. Those which are furthest aft are always taken off, as the cable approaches the main hatchway; and others are at the same time fastened on, in the fore-part of the ship, to supply their places. The persons employed to bind the nippers about the cable and voyal, are called nipper-men: they are assisted in this office by the boys of the ship, who always supply them with nippers, and receive the ends of those which are fastened, to walk aft with them, and take them off at the proper place, in order to return them to the nipper-men.
© Derived from Thomas Cadell's new corrected edition, London: 1780, page 205, 2003 Prepared by Paul Turnbull http://southseas.nla.gov.au/refs/falc/0893.html |