No. It has a long A vowel sound as in sale, sail, hail, and wail.
Your answer depends on your mode of travel, your route, your departure port and your ultimate Antarctic destination.
your butt
Your answer depends on several variables:Where in Antarctica do you want to go?What is the route you take to get to your Antarctic destination?What is the speed of the ship?One variable is this: if you sail south, in a straight line, and accept that any Antarctic soil is your destination, you will sail about 7,382.957 nautical miles.
Your answer depends on your Antarctic destination, your point of origin and the speed of your vessel. If you're sailing, you can sail from anywhere in USA and achieve landfall anywhere on Antarctica. For example, sailing from the Northwest coast of the US to the Antarctic Circle is about 8,274 nautical miles, if you sail in a straight line. From there you can calculate the distance to your Antarctic destination, and add it. Your time at sea, then, depends on the speed of your sailboat, your point of origin and your Antarctic journey's end.
Captain James Cook.
Gadget Boy's Adventures in History - 1998 A Whale of a Sail of a Tale was released on: USA: 21 March 1998
13 May 1787 to 18 January 1788/
Your answer depends on your ultimate Antarctic destination, the route you take, and speed of the boat, weather and sea conditions and whether or not your hull is iceberg reinforced.
the Antarctic ocean
No, he first invaded Britain in 55bc because there was a lot of tin, copper and lead to be found in Britain No, he did not sail to Britain, he went there after going to Germany. He didn't invade, he explored.
Ships that are hardened against iceberg damage can sail to any part of the Antarctic continent, since the continent is surrounded by the Southern Ocean.