huer - definizione. Che cos'è huer
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In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
  • opzioni di traduzione delle parole
  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

Cosa (chi) è huer - definizione

FISHING ASSISTANT
Huer
  • [[Huer's Hut]] on the headland of [[Towan Head]]

Huer         
·noun One who cries out or gives an alarm; specifically, a balker; a conder. ·see Balker.
Conder (fishing)         
In English fishing customs, a conder, also called a huer or bulker, was a person who stood on high places near the sea coast in times of herring-fishing to signal to the fishers which way the shoal of herrings or pilchards passed—their course being more discernible to those who stand on high cliffs, due to the blue colour they cause in the water, than to those aboard vessels. In Cornwall, the huer would shout 'Hevva!
hue         
  • All colors on this [[color wheel]] should appear to have the same lightness and the same saturation, differing only by hue
  • An illustration of the relationship between the "hue" of colors with maximal saturation in HSV and HSL with their corresponding RGB coordinates
  • HSV color space as a conical object
  • The hues in this image of a [[painted bunting]] are cyclically rotated over time in HSL.
  • HSL]] encodings of [[RGB]]
  • An image with the hues cyclically shifted in HSL space
  • hue 24 color
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
HUE; Huế (disambiguation)
n.
Color, tint, tinge, shade.

Wikipedia

Conder (fishing)

In English fishing customs, a conder, also called a huer or bulker, was a person who stood on high places near the sea coast in times of herring-fishing to signal to the fishers which way the shoal of herrings or pilchards passed—their course being more discernible to those who stand on high cliffs, due to the blue colour they cause in the water, than to those aboard vessels. In Cornwall, the huer would shout 'Hevva!, Hevva!' to alert the boats to the location of the pilchard shoals.

The term was also used to refer to the raised location where a conder stood.