What is the meaning of HAMMOCK. Phrases containing HAMMOCK
See meanings and uses of HAMMOCK!Slangs & AI meanings
Sanitary towel (term usu. used by males) From the puerile joke "hammock for a lazy cunt".
A traditional call made at wakey-wakey. Originated in the days of sail when women were allowed aboard ship. A woman in a sailor's hammock would display a leg and thereby the sailor was not required to turn out.
A pipe made to order hammocks to be tied up and stowed. The hammocks were typically stowed in racks inboard of the ship's side to protect crew from splinters from shot and provide a ready means of preventing flooding caused by damage.
1. Consists of two lanyards on a sailor's hammock, each spliced to its metal ring, each ring carrying eight nettles (six-foot lengths of 3-stranded white hemp 5/8 inch in circumference), for slinging the two ends of the hammock. 2. The lower corners of square sails or the corner of a triangular sail at the end of the boom.
Canvas sheets, slung from the deckhead in messdecks, in which seamen slept.
Short for a hammock. The last ships to have micks in the RCN were the Tribal class destroyers decommissioned in the early 1960s.
HAMMOCK
HAMMOCK
HAMMOCK
HAMMOCK
HAMMOCK
HAMMOCK
HAMMOCK
n. pl.
Small lines used to sling hammocks under the deck beams.
n.
A piece of canvas used to cover the hammocks which are lashed to the top in action to protect the topmen.
n.
A network of ropes used for various purposes, as for holding the hammocks when not in use, also for stowing sails, and for hoisting from the gunwale to the rigging to hinder an enemy from boarding.
n.
A swinging couch or bed, usually made of netting or canvas about six feet wide, suspended by clews or cords at the ends.
n.
Timbered land. See Hammock.
n.
A covering of canvas or tarpaulin for the hammocks, stowed on the nettings, between the quarterdeck and the forecastle.
n.
A rope on which hammocks or clothes are hung for drying.
n.
A piece of canvas covered with tar or a waterproof composition, used for covering the hatches of a ship, hammocks, boats, etc.
n.
A combination of lines or nettles by which a hammock is suspended.
n.
A piece of land thickly wooded, and usually covered with bushes and vines. Used also adjectively; as, hammock land.
HAMMOCK
HAMMOCK
HAMMOCK