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4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
schoo·ner
/ˈskunɚ/
縱帆船,大酒杯
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Schoon·er
n.
Naut.
Originally
,
a
small
,
sharp-built
vessel
,
with
two
masts
and
fore-and-aft
rig
.
Sometimes
it
carried
square
topsails
on
one
or
both
masts
and
was
called
a
topsail schooner
.
About
1840,
longer
vessels
with
three
masts
,
fore-and-aft
rigged
,
came
into
use
,
and
since
that
time
vessels
with
four
masts
and
even
with
six
masts
,
so
rigged
,
are
built
.
Schooners
with
more
than
two
masts
are
designated
three-masted
schooners
,
four-masted
schooners
,
etc
.
See
Illustration
in
Appendix
.
Note:
☞
The
first
schooner
ever
constructed
is
said
to
have
been
built
in
Gloucester
,
Massachusetts
,
about
the
year
1713,
by
a
Captain
Andrew
Robinson
,
and
to
have
received
its
name
from
the
following
trivial
circumstance
:
When
the
vessel
went
off
the
stocks
into
the
water
,
a
bystander
cried
out,
“O,
how
she
scoons
!”
Robinson
replied
,
“
A
scooner
let
her
be;”
and
,
from
that
time
,
vessels
thus
masted
and
rigged
have
gone
by
this
name
.
The
word
scoon
is
popularly
used
in
some
parts
of
New
England
to
denote
the
act
of
making
stones
skip
along
the
surface
of
water
.
The
Scottish
scon
means
the
same
thing
.
Both
words
are
probably
allied
to
the
Icel
.
skunda
,
skynda
,
to
make
haste
,
hurry
,
AS
.
scunian
to
avoid
,
shun
,
Prov
.
E
.
scun
.
In
the
New
England
records
,
the
word
appears
to
have
been
originally
written
scooner
.
Babson
,
in
his
“History
of
Gloucester,”
gives
the
following
extract
from
a
letter
written
in
that
place
Sept
. 25, 1721,
by
Dr
.
Moses
Prince
,
brother
of
the
Rev
.
Thomas
Prince
,
the
annalist
of
New
England
:
“This
gentleman
(
Captain
Robinson
)
was
first
contriver
of
schooners
,
and
built
the
first
of
that
sort
about
eight
years
since.”
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Schoon·er
,
n.
A
large
goblet
or
drinking
glass
, --
used
for
lager
beer
or
ale
. [U.S.]
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
schooner
n
1:
a
large
beer
glass
2:
sailing
vessel
used
in
former
times
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