释义 |
beak-head|ˈbiːkhɛd| [f. beak n.1 + head.] 1. Naval Arch. a. The beak or prow of an ancient war-galley. b. A small platform at the fore part of the upper deck. c. The part of a ship in front of the forecastle, fastened to the stem, and supported by the main knee.
1580North Plutarch (1676) 423 Commanding his Master to turn the beak-head of his galley forward. 1614Raleigh Hist. World viii, Each of them hung out a burning Cresset vpon two poles, at the Beake-head. 1627Capt. Smith Seaman's Gram. ii. 10 The Beak-head is without the ship before the fore-Castle..and of great vse, as well for the grace and countenance of the ship, as a place for men to ease themselues in. c1850Rudim. Nav. (Weale) 95 Beak head, the short platform at the fore-part of the upper deck..placed at the height of the ports from the deck, for the convenience of the chase-guns. 1855Kingsley Heroes iii. (1868) 105 They..nailed it [the bough] to the beak-head of the ship. 2. Arch. An ornament shaped like a bird's beak used in Norman mouldings.
1849Freeman Archit. 248 The beak-head is commonly employed to grasp, as it were, one of the heavy roll-mouldings of the style. 3. attrib. beak-head-beam, -bulkhead (see quot.); beak-head ornament, beak-head moulding (cf. sense 2).
1848Rickman Archit. Introd. 17 Ornamented with a succession of zigzags and beak-head ornaments. c1850Rudim. Nav. (Weale) 95 Cat-Beam, or Beak-Head Beam..is the broadest beam in a ship, generally made in two breadths, tabled and bolted together. The foreside is placed far enough forward to receive the heads of the stanchions of the beak-head bulk-head. 1867Smyth Sailor's Word-bk., Beak-head bulkhead, the old termination aft of the space called beak-head, which inclosed the fore part of the ship. |