lateen sail - translation to ελληνικό
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lateen sail - translation to ελληνικό

BOOMLESS TRIANGULAR SAIL USED AS BOTH MAIN AND HEAD SAIL
Lateen-rigged; Lateen rig; Lateen sail; Lateen yard; Lateen Sail; Lateen rigged; Lateen sails; Latin sail; Lateen-rig
  • A 17th-century woodcut of a triangular-sailed Bermudian vessel. Its raked masts were a development of the lateen.
  • The Bracera: a traditional lateen-rigged sailboat of the Mediterranean.
  • [[Dhow]] with lateen sail in "bad tack" with the sail pressing against the mast, in [[Mozambique]].
  • p=100}}
  • The lateen sail
  • settee]] sail rigs and a [[headsail]].

lateen sail         
ιστίο τρίγωνο
ιστίο τρίγωνο      
lateen sail
sailing vessel         
  • Austronesian vessel]] with [[outrigger]]s and a [[fore-and-aft]] sail
  • lateen rig]]
  • A carved stone relief panel showing a [[Borobudur ship]] (Austronesian) from 8th century [[Java]], depicted with [[outrigger]]s and fore-and-aft [[tanja sail]]s
  • 1848}}
  • Diagram contrasting course made good to windward by tacking a schooner versus a square-rigged ship.
  • [[Schooner]]s became favored for some coast-wise commerce after 1850—they enabled a small crew to handle sails.
  • 1798 sea battle between a French and British [[man-of-war]]
  • Sailing ship at sea, rolling and heeled over from the force of the wind on its sails.
  • The marine [[sextant]] is used to measure the elevation of celestial bodies above the horizon.
  • Victoria]]'', which completed the first global circumnavigation.
  • ship]]
  • 2}} was the largest sailing ship ever built.
  • Seamen aloft, shortening sail
  • Roman warship with sails, oars, and a steering oar
  • Hull form lines, lengthwise and in cross-section from a 1781 plan
LARGE WIND-POWERED WATER VESSEL
Sailing vessel; Sailing ships; Sailing craft; Sail ship; S/v; Sail ships; Sailship; Sail-ship; Sailing-ship; Sailingship; Automated sailing ships; Sailships; Autonomous sailing ship; Automated sailing; Self-sailing ship; Sailing vessels
ιστιοφόρο

Ορισμός

lateen sail
[la'ti:n]
¦ noun a triangular sail on a long yard at an angle of 45° to the mast.
Origin
C16: from Fr. (voile) Latine 'Latin (sail)', so named because it was common in the Mediterranean.

Βικιπαίδεια

Lateen

A lateen (from French latine, meaning "Latin") or latin-rig is a triangular sail set on a long yard mounted at an angle on the mast, and running in a fore-and-aft direction. The settee can be considered to be an associated type of the same overall category of sail.

The lateen originated in the Mediterranean as early as the 2nd century CE, during Roman times, and became common there by the 5th century. The wider introduction of lateen rig at this time coincided with a reduction in the use of the Mediterranean square rig of the classical era. Since the performance of these two rigs is broadly similar, it is suggested that the change from one to the other was on cost grounds, since lateen used fewer components and had less cordage to be replaced when it wore out.

Arab seafarers adopted the lateen rig at a later date – there is some limited archaeological evidence of lateen rig in the Indian Ocean in the 13th century CE and iconographic evidence from the 16th century. It has been suggested that this Arab use of lateen transferred to Austronesian maritime technology in the Far East, giving rise to the various fore and aft rigs used in that region, such as the crab claw sail.

The lateen sail played a prominent part in the shifts in maritime technology that occurred as Mediterranean and Northern ship construction traditions merged in the 16th century, with the lateen mizzen being, for a time, universally used in the full-rigged ships of the time – though later supplanted gaff rig in this role.