Gate is an archaic dialect of the word 'gait', meaning method or style. Thus, a 'nautical gate' is a sailor's style of walking or marching. The most well-known use of the word is in Cream's song Pressed Rat and Warthog, where there is a play on the word's first usage, to the second usage where 'The bad captain madman had ordered their fate. He laughed and stomped off with a nautical gate. The gate turned into a deroga tree and his peg-leg got woodworm and broke into three'. The second usage infers a wooden swinging gate, as would be the case if one had a wood leg. Here the captain's arrogance and bad karma caught up with him as one's fate tends to do.
Yes, nautical is an adjective.
Not necessarily. A not gate may or may not be an or gate, but an or gate must not be a not gate.
An synony for Nautical is deep-sea.
nautical is one of my favorite theme's
a nautical mile is 1.852 km and a mile is (statute)1.609344 km so a mile is bigger than a nautical mile
60 Nautical miles per degree, so 600 nautical miles.
For the times of nautical and civil twilight you need to refer to a nautical almanac.
1000 miles per nautical star.
the not gate applied to and gate is nand gate
A loft in nautical terms is a bunk.
Things nautical. The sea and ships.
The British invented nautical flags.