BabaYaga
Well-Known Member
I recently read that the expression 'touch and go' has a nautical background. Is this correct and if so, is this origin evident to the average native English speaker?
Good, well-found.You're both right, though neither usage was the primary one: 'Touch and go' - the meaning and origin of this phrase
Calling a small boat owner "captain" is one that grates on most US sailors. It has become a common way designate the one who is responsible, but it never sits well.
Good, well-found.
Another nautical phrase?Good, well-found.
So the OED say a capsize is when a boat 'overturns'.
Does that not mean it refers to a complete inversion?
Another nautical phrase?
Thanks - I did like '... CANOE - the Committee to Ascribe a Naval Origin to Everything'.![]()
Rather like having a Prime Minister named BorisTrawler, sailboat, motorboat, and many others are just differences between US and UK English, like truck for lorry. Not incorrect when used regionally. We find many Britishisms terribly "cute."
Calling a small boat owner "captain" is one that grates on most US sailors. It has become a common way designate the one who is responsible, but it never sits well.
Boris de PfeffelRather like having a Prime Minister named Boris
Most of the times a boat is described as havng a list it is not, it is has developed a loll. List is an unstable condition - perhaps from a free surface on board. A loll is stable, perhaps a flooded compartment or shifted cargo or when aground. Again, a vessel aground and therefore not upright or incorrectly trimmed ballast-wise it almost certainly has a loll, not a list.
Rolling goes all the way round, as in a slow roll surely? Bank is a verb and a noun , in gliding I woukd say.I once got as far as buying a copy of the British Gliding Association instructor training pack , as I was being encouraged to instruct. I gave up the idea and chucked away the pack because it was so badly written; the one annoyance I remember was a long homily on the fact that "bank" is the condition and "roll" the movement and the very next sentence said "Exercise: Bank the glider until ..." Yes, I know it;s a small point but sloppy writing normally betrays sloppy thinking, and a flying instructors' manual should not be the product of sloppy thinking.
I once got as far as buying a copy of the British Gliding Association instructor training pack , as I was being encouraged to instruct. I gave up the idea and chucked away the pack because it was so badly written; the one annoyance I remember was a long homily on the fact that "bank" is the condition and "roll" the movement and the very next sentence said "Exercise: Bank the glider until ..." Yes, I know it;s a small point but sloppy writing normally betrays sloppy thinking, and a flying instructors' manual should not be the product of sloppy thinking.
Bank is a verb and a noun , in gliding I woukd say.
I am curious what came after 'until' in your book![]()