Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A sailing vessel having two masts.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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He chose a craft he never seen, a ketch, a compromise between a yawl and a schooner, a two-master with a larger sail forward.
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Redden Alt Mer was awake again, standing at the tiller, steering the skiff with a sure hand in the wake of the two-master.
Ilse Witch Brooks, Terry 2000
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The liveship was not only fleeter than the two-master, but in a position to crowd her over in the channel.
The Mad Ship Hobb, Robin 1999
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"Young Toric often sends his two-master north for trade," said one of the seaholders, in a voice so confidential that Piemur had to strain to catch the words.
Dragon Drums McCaffrey, Anne, 1926- 1979
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"Young Toric often sends his two-master north for trade," said one of the seaholders, in a voice so confidential that Piemur had to strain to catch the words.
Dragon Drums McCaffrey, Anne, 1926- 1979
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The brig was almost the smallest two-master that could successfully round Cape Horn at the farthest tip of South America.
Hawaii Michener, James 1959
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Then, suddenly, the ebb sweeps off from the intruder, and leaves his two-master keeled over, with useless anchor and cable exposed,
Acadia or, A Month with the Blue Noses Frederic S. Cozzens
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Narrow of beam, a two-master with a steel hull that stood well out of the water forward, she rode the water with the repose and high glee of the bird she was named after.
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She was a two-master, and, when I saw her first, as dirty and disreputable as are most coasting-vessels.
The After House Mary Roberts Rinehart 1917
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It looked like a ring of white snow floating on the water, and inside the ring was a careened two-master -- just the ribs and stumps left.
It, and Other Stories Gouverneur Morris 1914
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