make sailの例文
- The space is now occupied by a company that makes sails.
- The mill was said to produce cloth for making sails.
- All hands were mustered to make sail and turn the ship to the southwest.
- However Luttrell judged it prudent to make sail for England with his two prizes.
- Ratsey and Lapthorn make sails at Cowes.
- In the early decades of the country, it was especially useful in making sails and paper products.
- Aubrey wanted to be in Riga to get poldavy, which was a coarse canvas favored for making sails.
- It has swept-back spreaders that eliminate the need for running backstays, which in turn make sail-handling easier.
- Wives of merchant and whaling captains shipped out with their spouses, often helping with navigation, making sails and keeping logbooks.
- While making sail to escape, the two sloops hoisted signals and fired guns, as if signaling to a fleet ahead.
- While sailing dead down wind is inconvenient for making sail, it is still possible to raise the junk sail with the sail luffing.
- Adapting technology used to make sails for sailboats, Park devised a method to " mass-customize " jeans for each customer.
- Traditional Highland practice was to make sails of tough, thick-threaded wool, with ropes being made of moss-fir or heather.
- Instead, as " Junon " seemed lost Wetherall ordered that " Observateur " make sail and escape to the west.
- The latter had been converted for battle and were leaking heavily, making sail with severely damaged masts and rigging, and with most of their anchors missing.
- At 2 : 00pm land was positively sighted to the west and northwest and all hands were mustered to make sail and turn the ship to the southwest.
- Both of these ships were in the Mona Passage, making sail for Cap-Fran鏰is along with several smaller ships, when Hood's squadron spotted them.
- On 8 October 1779, the French launched a direct assault, hoping to expedite the capture of the city and freeing the fleet to make sail before hurricane season.
- Strong easterly winds prevented C髍doba from making port at Cadiz, and his ships were scattered to the west, before they could make sail back to the Spanish coast.
- Therefore, engineer John Smeaton invented the cast-iron " Lincolnshire cross " to make sail-crosses with five, six, and even eight blades possible.