|
Reverse Search
Reverse Search allows you to search within the full text of dictionary entries for words, word parts, and phrases.
Search for entries that contain:
Exact matches of any of the individual words entered in the search box.
Example: Searching for "apple orange" identifies all entries that contain the word "apple" or the word "orange."
Any form of any of the individual words entered in the search box.
Example: Searching for "apple orange" identifies all entries that contain the word "apple" or "apples" or "orange" or "oranges."
Exact matches of all of the individual words entered in the search box.
Example: Searching for "apple orange" identifies all entries that contain the word "apple" and the word "orange."
The exact sequence of words and/or characters entered in the search box (for example, a fragment of a word, a single word, multiple words, or even a phrase containing punctuation)
Example: Searching for "a variety of apple" identifies all entries that contain that phrase. Searching for "app" identifies all entries that contain the letters "app," such as occurrences of "apple," "application," and "apply."
Search within these fields:
Optional:
Limit by part of speech:
abandon ship |
to leave a ship that is in danger of sinking. [1/2 definitions] |
abeam |
at right angles to a line passing from the front to the back of a ship. |
aboard |
on or into a ship, plane, train, or the like; on board. [1/2 definitions] |
aft |
into, near, or toward the rear end of a ship or aircraft. [2 definitions] |
aftermost |
nearest the back or stern, as on a ship; farthest aft. |
ahoy |
a greeting to attract attention or hail a ship. |
alee |
at or toward that side of a ship which is farthest from the source of wind. |
amidships |
in or toward the middle of a ship or aircraft. [2 definitions] |
anchor |
a heavy device, connected by a cable to a boat or ship, that is dropped to the bottom of a body of water to restrict the vessel's motion. [1/7 definitions] |
Argo |
(italics) in Greek mythology, the ship used by Jason in his search for the Golden Fleece. |
at the wheel |
driving or steering a vehicle such as an automobile, ship, or the like. [1/2 definitions] |
ballast |
heavy material placed in the hold of a boat or ship to make it more stable. [1/4 definitions] |
banker2 |
on the Newfoundland banks, a ship or person engaged in fishing for cod. |
bark3 |
a sailing ship with between three and five masts, all but one of which are square-rigged. |
barkentine |
a ship with three or more masts, square-rigged on the foremast, and fore-and-aft rigged on the others. |
barnacle |
any of a large group of marine crustaceans that are free-floating as larvae, but attach to submerged or intertidal surfaces such as wharves, rocks, ship bottoms, and the like, and form sharp-edged shells as adults. [1/3 definitions] |
beam |
the widest part of a ship. [1/8 definitions] |
beam-ends |
the ends of the crossbeams of a ship. |
beamy |
broad or wide, as a ship. [1/2 definitions] |
belaying pin |
a short round metal or wooden bar that fits into the rail of a ship, and around which ropes are secured. |
Ben Nevis |
the name of the ship that landed in Galveston, Texas in 1854 with a congregation of approximately 500 Slavic immigrants who sought freedom from cultural oppression and religious persecution. [1/2 definitions] |
|
|