Whipstaff Meaning in English
word
ˈwɪpˌstæf
WIP-staf
ˈwɪpˌstɑːf
WIP-stahf
释义
A whipstaff is a wooden rod used on old sailing ships to steer the vessel by moving the tiller, before the invention of the ship’s wheel.
用法与细微差别
"Whipstaff" is a historical nautical term, rarely used outside maritime history or museums. Usually refers to sailing ships from the 16th to early 18th centuries. In modern ships, the wheel has replaced it.
Spanish: barra de timón (barco antiguo) - timón de mano (barco antiguo)Portuguese (BR): verga do leme (navio antigo) - haste de lemePortuguese (PT): verga do leme (navio antigo) - haste do lemeChinese (Simplified): 舵桨杆(古代船只)Chinese (Traditional): 舵槳桿(古代船隻)Hindi: ह्विपस्टाफ़ (पुराना जहाज के स्टीयरिंग डंडा)Arabic: عصا الدفة (سفن قديمة)Bengali: হুইপস্টাফ (জাহাজ চালানোর কাঠের ডাণ্ডা)Russian: штуртрап (старинное судовое рулевое весло)Japanese: ホイップスタッフ(舵取り棒)Vietnamese: cần lái gỗ (whipstaff)Korean: 휘프스태프(선박 조타용 막대기)Turkish: whipstaff - dümen çubuğu (tarihi)Urdu: ہوِپ اسٹاف (لکڑی کی پرانی جہاز کی ڈنڈا)Indonesian: batang kemudi (whipstaff)
例句
The sailor used the whipstaff to steer the ship.
basic
A whipstaff is made of strong wood.
basic
Old ships often had a whipstaff instead of a wheel.
basic
Without a whipstaff, steering those large galleons was nearly impossible.
natural
You can see an old whipstaff on display at the maritime museum.
natural
Back in those days, captains relied on the whipstaff for every turn at sea.
natural