Halyards, ropes and stays
No , the sails are called the sheets. Wrong - the sails are called SAILS. The control lines to the sails are sheets.
No , the sails are called the sheets. Wrong - the sails are called SAILS. The control lines to the sails are sheets.
Stays, lines, ropes and halyards.
rigging
On a ship, the entire assembly including masts, yardarms, sails and ropes are collectively referred to as rigging. The ropes themselves are usually called cordage or lines.
Your crossword puzzle answer is halyard, a shortened word for "haul yard".
The "ropes" that raise or lower the sails are called HALYARDS and the "ropes" that control the sails are called SHEETS. Halyards are the lines (ropes) that raise sails. Downhauls lower them (note that they are not always included as gravity does usually help out, though they are sometimes necessary). Sheets are used to pull the bottom corner of a sail aft (or towards the "stern" or back of the ship). Tacks pull them forward (ie towards the "bow" or front of the ship). Square sails also have lines that are used to douse (square sails are often "lowered" by pulling them up, and set by letting them fall down as they are attached on the top edge by a long horizontal spar called a yard) or to reef them (decreasing the sail area in cases of heavier wind) These are the buntlines, clewlines, reeflines, and reefing points. The yards that hold square sails up also need to be able to turn, and lines attached at their ends called braces pull either the port or starboard (left or right) end of the yard aft. There are, of course, many more however these are probably the most important.
The five ropes on a ship are the halyard, sheet, mooring line, towline, and heaving line. These ropes are essential for various tasks such as raising and lowering sails, securing the ship to a dock, towing other vessels, and throwing a line to another ship for communication or assistance.
The halyard holds the sail up. When a rope has an assigned job on a boat (or a ship) it is referred to as a line.
Houses, mats, hats, ropes, sails, toys, roofs, and floors. Hope this helps :)
it originates from shipping. when a young lad came abourd he became a deck hand and one of the first things he'd do is climb the ships ropes to handle the sails. it means learning the basic runnings of an operation or job.