Ropes, called lines, that connect and manipulate sails.
1 Hemp flourishes even to rankness, so that we need not want cordage .
2 With that in mind, they bound the long poles together with cordage .
3 The standing cordage of lumber is no less, only in bulk, girth.
4 It was littered with piles of cordage , fishing nets, and upturned boats.
5 They fought with one another for useless bits of planking and cordage .
6 It was a quantity of hemp cordage , for use principally as standing-rigging.
7 There it is shredded and made into cordage , coarse cloth, or paper.
8 Lucy knelt beside her, her shoulder resting against a pile of cordage .
9 Of these last the natives make oil, vinegar, flour, cordage , and mats.
10 Some essence is dissolved, some binding cordage snaps, or some one dies.
11 Still some new cordage to come aboard, but the lads 'ave done well.
12 Quite simply, it is an overhand knot tied using two lengths of cordage .
13 And as for cordage , the ships of Syracuse in 200 B.C.-
14 As it dangled among the cordage of the bell, I fancied it alive.
15 The part next the anchor secured by cordage wrapped round it.
16 Amidst this uncertainty the cordage of the sail suddenly gave way.
Другие примеры для термина "cordage"
Grammar, pronunciation and more