释义 |
abox, a-box, adv. Naut.|əˈbɒks| [f. a- prefix 2 + box v.1 (sense 13).] Applied to the position of the head-yards when only the head-sails are laid aback.
1801Capt. Ferris in Naval Chron. VI. 245 With an intent..to brace the head yards a-box. 1867[see brace v.3]. 1867Smyth Sailor's Word-bk. s.v., To lay the head-yards square, or abox. 1922Blackw. Mag. Dec. 803/2 Her sides were flaked with rust, her yards all a-box. 1961F. H. Burgess Dict. Sailing 7 Abox, term applied to yards of a mast that are braced in opposite direction to those on a neighbouring mast; a handy practice to retain a vessel under control. |