A 40 cannon ship will have 20 cannons on both sides in order to keep the ship protected on all side.
i know you are cheating on your homewoprk but I'll give you the answer anyway. Both ships maden of iron fought though no ship could sink the other no matter how many cannons fired. The battle raged on for four hours yet no ship was sank so both sides claimed that they had won.
vehicle- ship as a passanger, feet, and horse back supplies-hand gun and a cannon on the ship
"Ninety-Three" - A formidable character, Marquis de Lantenac, who is leading a monarchist insurrection is smuggled on a boat from England. He saves the life of a seaman who stops a loose cannon from destroying the ship, and then executes him for letting the cannon go loose in the first place.
they are both a ship
both did
No old Iron sides was a ship used in the war of 1812. A British cannon ball hit the side of the ship on freshly cut replacement board. The board was strong enough to with hold the shock of the cannon ball. A sailor on the that ship called her "old Iron sides" from then on.
It is called a "ship", a ship has both left and right sides.
The ship had a cannon mounted on its side.
First you have to buy a ship from the Chinese guy on the Chinese island. Once you do that your new ship will have a cannon in it. Your raft does not come with a cannon You may need to take out a loan to buy a ship :)
a pirate ship
a culverin
No, a cannon on land is called the same as one on a ship. The term "cannon" refers to a large, heavy firearm that is typically mounted on a carriage or a ship's deck to shoot projectiles.
Today springs are used to check recoil, but in the days of HMS Victory the cannon were on wheeled carriages, with ropes to stop them from recoiling too far when fired. Also, the ship pitched when sailing, especially in the rough seas, and the term "loose cannon" originally referred to a ship's cannon loosed from its rope and rolling dangerously on the deck.
The cannons on your ship!
brass monkey
yes
Portholes, also for cannon.