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

T

TABLING to TAIL

TAIL-BLOCK to TENDING

TENON to TIDE

TIER to TOGGEL
TIER
TIER of the cable
TIGHT
TILLER
TILT
TIMBERS
TIMBER AND ROOM, or room and space
TIMONEER
TOGETHER!
TOGGEL

TOMPION to TOPPING

TOPPING-LIFT to TRACT-SCOUT

TRACTING to TREE-NAILS

TRESTLE-TREES to TRIP

TRIPPING to TRYING

TUCK to TYE


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TOGGEL

TOGGEL, (cabillot, Fr.) a small wooden pin, about five or six inches in length, and usually tapering from the middle towards the extremities. It is used to fix transversely in the lower part of a tackle, in which it serves as an hook whereby to attach the tackle to a strop, slings, or any body whereon the effort of the tackle is to be employed.

There are also toggels of another kind, employed to fasten the top-gallant theets to the span, which is knotted round the cap at the top-mast-head. For as the lifts of the topsail-yard are out of use when the topsail is hoisted, they are always converted into top-gallant-sheets, to render the rigging at the mast-heads as light and simple as possible. Before the topsail-yards can be lowered so as to be sustained by their lifts, it therefore becomes necessary to transfer that part of the lift to the top-mast-head, so that the whole weight of the yard may be sustained by its mast-head, and no part thereof by the top-gallant-yard, which would otherwise be the case. This is performed by fixing the double part, or bight of the lift, within the eye of the span above mentioned, and inserting the toggel through the former, so as to confine it to the latter, which operation is amongst sailors called putting the sheets in the beckets.


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© Derived from Thomas Cadell's new corrected edition, London: 1780, page 293, 2003
Prepared by Paul Turnbull
http://southseas.nla.gov.au/refs/falc/1366.html