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Page 1086
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William Falconer's Dictionary of the MarineReference Works
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Table of Contents

R

RABBET to RAISING a purchase

RAKE to RATES

RATES to To REEVE

RECKONING to RHOMB-LINE

RIBBANDS to RIGGING-OUT a boom

RIGHTING to ROBANDS, or ROPE BANDS

ROGUES-YARN to ROUND-HOUSE
ROGUES-YARN
ROLLER
ROLLING
ROLLING-TACKLE
ROPES
ROPE-BANDS
ROPE-YARN
ROVER
ROUGH-TREE
ROUND-HOUSE

ROUNDING to ROYAL

RUDDER to RUNNING-RIGGING


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ROLLER

ROLLER, a cylindrical piece of timber, fixed either horizontally or perpendicularly above a ship's deck, so as to revolve about an axis. It is used to prevent the cables, hawsers, &c. from being chafed by the friction which their surfaces would otherwise encounter, from bearing against that part of the ship, where the roller is placed, whilst they are drawn into the ship, &c. by mechanical powers.

ROLLERS, are also moveable pieces of wood, of the same figure, which are occasionally placed under planks, or long pieces of timber, in order to move them with greater facility either in the dock-yards, or in lading and delivering merchant-ships.


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© Derived from Thomas Cadell's new corrected edition, London: 1780, page 246, 2003
Prepared by Paul Turnbull
http://southseas.nla.gov.au/refs/falc/1086.html