whydah - definition. What is whydah
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WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Whydah (disambiguation); Whidah; Wydah

whydah         
['w?d?]
(also whyda)
¦ noun
1. an African weaver bird, the male of which has a black back and a very long black tail used in display flight. [Genus Vidua: several species.]
2. another term for widowbird.
Origin
C18 (orig. widow-bird): alt. by assoc. with Whidah (now Ouidah), a town in Benin.
whidah         
¦ noun archaic spelling of whydah.
Whydah (1797 ship)         
Whydah was launched in 1797 at Whitby as a West Indiaman. She was captured but returned or remained in her owners' hands.

ويكيبيديا

Whydah

Whydah may refer in English to:

  • Whydah, one of a number of species of birds in the family Viduidae, also called indigobirds
  • Whydah Gally, a ship captained by pirate "Black Sam" Bellamy that was wrecked in 1717 and was discovered in 1984
  • Whydah (ship)
  • Ouidah, city and colonial fort in present Benin
  • Kingdom of Whydah, which included Ouidah but was headquartered in Savi
أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. If true, this wreck would provide a second time capsule of life in the pirate era, joining the half–excavated Whydah.
2. Aboard Bellamy‘s ship, Whydah, which was wrecked off the coast of Cape Cod in a 1717 storm, Kinkor‘s colleagues found 100 pieces of African gold jewelry that had been broken up to divide among the crew.
3. "This particular phase of piracy was more of a maritime revolt than simple crime," notes Kenneth Kinkor, research director of Expedition Whydah, the Provincetown, Mass., group excavating Sam Bellamy‘s wreck.
4. Scholars have also found that a large number of those aboard pirate ships were Africans, including 15 percent of those on the Whydah and as many as 60 percent of those on Blackbeard‘s last command, the Adventure, when he was killed.