A family of Tamil shipwrights were adzing baulks of timber into banana-shaped fishing rafts. |
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The even skin of the carvel hull enabled shipwrights to cut gunports close to the waterline. |
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And though it is still clogged with scaffolding, shipwrights, and a half-dozen cherry pickers, the promenade is already expansively dramatic. |
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With that he called for Sylvanius, who was throwing dice with the shipwrights by the boat yard. |
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That does not include all the jobs of shipwrights, engineers, ice-makers, electronic experts, and fish filleters, which will be put at risk. |
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After the topgallant got to be pretty standard shipwrights started making the topgallant mast taller. |
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The plan is to take four or five shipwrights, who built Jeanie Johnston, to India and assess the damage for ourselves. |
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In addition to depicting the instruments, the author related their use to various tradesmen and professions, including millwrights, bricklayers, shipwrights, and architects. |
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In addition to depicting the instruments, Tuttell related their use to various tradesmen and professions, including millwrights, bricklayers, shipwrights, and architects. |
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By then living in Florida, the former customer and friend read an article about the Amistad reconstruction that said the project needed shipwrights. |
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Those whose names survive are shipwrights who were likely to have overseen the construction of a model much as they did the building of an actual ship. |
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Early unions followed the British model of craft-based associations among printers, tailors, cordwainers, cabinet-makers, shipwrights, carpenters, and stonemasons. |
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By contrast, a Scottish artiste might play to sodden Glasgow shipwrights, a restrained middle class audience and a temperance rally in the same week. |
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There was slave labor available, but shipwrights, machinists, sailmakers, and all the skilled trades required in shipbuilding were in critically short supply. |
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Now, unlike the master shipbuilders of the Mediterranean civilizations, the Viking shipwrights didn't think in terms of cargo tonnage, military logistics, or naval tactics. |
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By this time 2,025 shipwrights worked in the town and some 2,000 others were employed in related industries. |
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Shipbuilders, also called shipwrights, follow a specialized occupation that traces its roots to before recorded history. |
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Hundreds of New England shipwrights built oceangoing ships, which they sold to British and American merchants. |
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At that time, as well as shipwrights, New Quay had half a dozen blacksmith shops, three sail makers, three ropewalks and a foundry. |
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These and similar ship types were familiar to Portuguese navigators and shipwrights. |
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Shipwrights now required a labour force of workmen with a different set of skills who could saw to length and fit a ship together according to plan. |
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Tomolo'o, the Chumash word for such a craft, may derive from kumula'au, the Hawaiian term for the logs from which shipwrights carve planks to be sewn into canoes. |
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AuOnce, this was a stout ship, with oak futtocks and floor timbers, fastened with iron nails, built with saw and adz and the calloused hands of shipwrights now long dead. |
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In 1573 English shipwrights introduced designs, first demonstrated in Dreadnought, that allowed the ships to sail faster and manoeuvre better and permitted heavier guns. |
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Major Chatterton became a Liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Shipwrights in London in 1979 and was also a Freeman of the English capital. |
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The street name undoubtedly derives from the smiths and shipwrights who built and repaired ships here when the tidal waters reached as far as this point. |
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