A caravel is one of the ships Columbus sailed in that has 2-4 masts and lateen sails.
That would be the Caravel.
A caravel is a small lateen-rigged sailing ship developed in Portugal in the fifteenth century. Caravels were fast and maneuverable and capable of ocean travel. They could have one to four masts.
A Tall Ship. A Caravel. A Bark. A Brigantine. A Clipper Ship. A Brig.
A caravel is a ship with 3 masts. To see a photo of a delightful model of a caravel, click on the Related Link.
A barque, a caravel, brig, a carrack, a clipper, a corvette, a frigate. These are some of the types of sailing vessels that can have three masts
there was 3 masts on the mayflower
It was a steam ship, so no masts for sails.
A caravel has a keel, a hull, a bow, a stern, an amidships, a main deck, a below decks, a bilge, a captain's quarters, a forecastle, a galley, ship's lockers, anchor(s), spare lines, sails, masts, a captain, and a crew. They usually have a spirit, too ;) but that has to be felt while operating her.
Tall ships. More specifically, a Barque or Bark has three masts (possible more) fore and aft rigged mizzen mast. Barquentine, three masts with all but the foremost fore and aft rigged. A fully rigged ship, three or more masts, all of them square rigged A Schooner, three or more masts with fore and aft rigged sails
Caravel is a noun.
Two. On a ketch or yawl, the front of the two masts is taller than the aft mast.