catamaran

listen to the pronunciation of catamaran
English - Turkish
katamaran

Bir defa devrildiğinde katamaranın yardım almadan doğrulması olanaksızdır. - Once capsized, a catamaran is impossible to right without help.

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catamarans
katamaran
English - English
A small rectangular raft used in dockyards to protect the hulls of large ships
A raft used on the St Lawrence River by lashing two ships together
A twin-hulled sailing yacht, especially one used for racing; the hulls being connected by a deck carrying the mast, rigging, cockpit and cabin
A raft consisting of two or more logs tied together
A twin hulled boat, either power or sail
a sailboat with two parallel hulls held together by single deck
A twin: hulled boat, with hulls side: by-side
Modified forms are much used in the lumber regions of North America, and at life-saving stations
A quarrelsome woman; a scold
A catamaran is a sailing boat with two parallel hulls that are held in place by a single deck. a sailing boat with two separate hulls (=the part that goes in the water) (kattumaram, from kattu + maram ). Twin-hulled sailing and engine-powered boat. Its design was based on a raft of two logs bridged by planks used by peoples in the Indonesian archipelago, Polynesia, and Micronesia. Up to 70 ft (21 m) long, early catamarans were paddled by many men and used for travel, in war, and in recreation. Especially after the sail was added, voyages as long as 2,000 mi (3,700 km) were made. In the 1870s they sailed so successfully against monohulled boats that they were barred from racing. The modern catamaran, which averages about 40 ft (12 m) in length, has been produced since 1950. They are very fast craft, achieving speeds of 20 mph (32 kph)
Twin hulled sailboat
Any vessel with twin hulls, whether propelled by sails or by steam; esp
A kind of raft or float, consisting of two or more logs or pieces of wood lashed together, and moved by paddles or sail; used as a surf boat and for other purposes on the coasts of the East and West Indies and South America
A boat with twin, side-by-side hulls
Boat with two hulls connected by a deck
A kind of fire raft or torpedo bat
{i} raft of two or more logs tied together; boat with twin hulls placed one beside the other; argumentative woman (Informal)
A double or treble-hulled vessel constructed in wood, aluminum or reinforced glass fibre and is also composed of two or three hulls diagonally joined together by various methods Normally no ballast is needed to counteract the center buoyancy since it enjoys good stability at sea
one of a class of double- hulled pleasure boats remarkable for speed
A twin hulled boat Catamaran sailboats are known for their ability to plane and are faster than single hulled boats (monohulls) in some conditions
catamarans
plural of catamaran
catamaran

    Hyphenation

    ca·ta·ma·ran

    Turkish pronunciation

    kätımırän

    Pronunciation

    /ˌkatəmərˈan/ /ˌkætəmɜrˈæn/

    Etymology

    [ "ka-t&-m&-'ran, 'ka-t& ] (noun.) 1673. From Tamil கட்டு (kaṭṭu, “to tie”) + மரம் (maram, “tree, wood”).
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