A vessel with two masts square-rigged like a ship's fore- and main-masts, but carrying also on her main-mast a lower fore-and-aft sail with a gaff and boom.
Two-masted sailing vessel with both masts square rigged.
A two-masted vessel with both masts square-rigged.
Sailing vessel with two masts rigged with square sails.
i) A two masted square-rigged ship, with an additional lower fore-and-aft sail on the gaff and a boom to the mainmast, ii) slang a prison, esp. on a warship.
a two-masted vessel, fully square-rigged on both masts, with a fore-and-aft sail on the lower part of the mainmast.
A two- mast ed vessel, square-rigged on both masts (as is the Lady Washington).
two-masted sailing vessel square-rigged on both masts
a penal institution (especially on board a ship)
a heavily guarded room aboard starships
a two-masted square rigged ship and not as fast as the topsail schooner Alligator
a two-masted vessel having yards, or square-rigged on both masts
a two-masted vessel, square-rigged -- i
a vessel with two masts both rigged square
Vessel with two masts and square rigged on both of them.
A place of confinement; a prison
A ship's jail or lock-up. Also a type of sailing vessel.
Ships , Rigging Brigantine Ships , Rigging
A compartment that serves as a jail aboard the ship. Where confined sailors or marines are issued rations of bread and water.
A square-rigged ship with two masts.
In nautical terms, a brig is a vessel with two square-rigged masts. During the Age of Sail, brigs were seen as fast and maneuverable and were used as both naval war ships and merchant ships. While their use stretches back before the 1600s the most famous period of the brig was during the 1800s when they were involved in famous naval battles such as the Battle of Lake Erie.