There is an anchor incorporated in their badge of rank.I wonder how it came to mean a leading hand in the Navy?
Probably because you are doing it on a mobile? The old system used to do that, I found it was easier if it was a short post, to delete it and start again rather than try to edit.Yes and on the UK canal sydten at locks.
( I can't correct my typo because when I try, it will obliterate the whole post, plus your quited bit. SYSTEM!) WU I GIVE UP
Also addressed by those of a lower rating as "Hooky".
Seen here with 3 "stripes" indicating 12 years of good conduct; or 12 years undetected crime, as we used to say.
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So it's not just the French that get confused between "jib" and "gybe"Although "gybe" can be traced back to the late 17th century (from the Dutch "gijb"), "jibe" has been in use since the 18th century - including by James Cook (almost - he spelled it "jib").
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That sounds like spurious latinization of a word - it's a common enough phenomenon, arising from the perceived superiority of classical languages in that period (every educated person knew Latin in those days; it was regarded as the foundation of education). The remnants of it were still around when I ws a schoolboy; Latin was a compulsory subject in the grammar school I attended (the very term "Grammar School" refers to the teaching of Latin). With hindsight, I actually regard it as one of the more useful topics that I studied - it means that I can make out most southern European languages and have a handle on the derivation of many English words.Please forgive the drift, but here’s a curiosity: a late C19th etymology for the term caucus (for a meeting of supporters) had it deriving from a meeting of Boston caulkers in the early C18th.
(No clear etymology has been established, an alternative being Algonquian words for counsel, or for advisor. Either way, the plural is caucuses, not the Latin analogue cauci.)
Heavo ho? Where did you come across that? Never heard of it before.So is "heavo ho" a phrase for a sailor that's eaten too much ho?
Heavo ho? Where did you come across that? Never heard of it before.
Heavo ho? Where did you come across that? Never heard of it before.
Any dictionary, including OED.
It has its own wikipedia page: Two six heave - Wikipedia. The gun crew derivation seems to be problematic.I have had '2,6, Heave!' shouted at me, it got us pulling together as a team and think it's an old cry, something to do with gun crews possibly.
I assumed that was a typo."Heavo ho" is not in the OED. Are you mixing it up with "Heave ho", which is?
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Also addressed by those of a lower rating as "Hooky".
Seen here with 3 "stripes" indicating 12 years of good conduct; or 12 years undetected crime, as we used to say.
View attachment 82538
The Oxford Companion to ships & the sea, edited by Peter Kemp, 1976, has the following explanation:I've always wondered why they use a foul anchor. Anyone wearing that badge who let the ship's anchor get like that would be in big trouble, as would the ship!
... 'Knots per hour' was in regular use a couple of hundred years ago I believe, though it sounds anachronistic to us now. ...