vang

listen to the pronunciation of vang
Englisch - Türkisch
gizin ablisi iskota halat
abli
boom vang
(Askeri) iskota halatı
Englisch - Englisch
A line extended down from the end of a yard or a gaff, used to regulate its position
To undertake for at the Font; be godfather or godmother to
To take; undertake for
A boom vang, a strap or line which exerts downward pressure on the boom near where it joins the mast of a fore-and-aft rigged sailboat
A rope to steady the peak of a gaff
a device used to hold down the boom
A control line used to pull the boom in a downward direction In England this line is called a 'kicking strap'
(a) A guy for steadying a gaff; (b) Running rigging pulling a boom downward
A rope running from the peak of a gaff to a ship's rail or mast, used to steady the gaff
scared
1 A line used to steady the boom with sailing off the wind (leeward); 2 A device, usually with mechanical advantage, used to pull the boom down, flattening the sail
boom vang
A line or piston system on a sailboat used to exert downward force on the boom and thus control the shape of the sail; a martingale
boom vang
rigging secured to prevent the boom from lifting (Nautical)
vang

    Türkische aussprache

    väng

    Synonyme

    kicking strap

    Aussprache

    /ˈvaɴɢ/ /ˈvæŋ/

    Etymologie

    () From Middle English vangen, southern variant of fangen (“to seize, catch”), from Old English fōn (“to take, grasp, seize, catch, capture, make prisoner, receive, accept, assume, undertake, meet with, encounter”), and Old Norse fanga (“to fetch, capture”), both from Proto-Germanic *fanhanan, *fangōnan (“to catch, capture”), from Proto-Indo-European *paḱ- (“to fasten, place”). Cognate with West Frisian fange (“to catch”), Dutch vangen (“to catch”), German fangen (“to catch”), Danish fange (“to catch”). More at fang.
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