Word Study
hawse
CIDE DICTIONARY
hawse, n. [Orig. a hawse hole, or hole in the bow of the ship; cf. Icel. hals, hāls, neck, part of the bows of a ship, AS. heals neck. See Collar, and cf. Halse to embrace.].
- A hawse hole. Harris. [1913 Webster]
- The situation of the cables when a vessel is moored with two anchors, one on the starboard, the other on the port bow. [1913 Webster]
OXFORD DICTIONARY
hawse, n.
1 the part of a ship's bows in which hawse-holes or hawse-pipes are placed.
2 the space between the head of an anchored vessel and the anchors.
3 the arrangement of cables when a ship is moored with port and starboard forward anchors.
1 the part of a ship's bows in which hawse-holes or hawse-pipes are placed.
2 the space between the head of an anchored vessel and the anchors.
3 the arrangement of cables when a ship is moored with port and starboard forward anchors.
Idiom
hawse-hole a hole in the side of a ship through which a cable or anchor-rope passes. hawse-pipe a metal pipe lining a hawse-hole.
Etymology
ME halse, prob. f. ON h{aacute}ls neck, ship's bow
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