sail (s l)n.1. Nautical a. A piece of fabric sewn together and fitted to the spars and rigging of a vessel so as to convert the force of the wind into forward motion of the vessel. b. The sails of a ship or boat. c. The superstructure of a submarine. 2. pl. sail or sails Nautical A sailing vessel. 3. Nautical A trip or voyage in a sailing craft. 4. Something, such as the blade of a windmill, that resembles a sail in form or function. v. sailed, sail·ing, sails v.intr.1. Nautical a. To move across the surface of water, especially by means of a sailing vessel. b. To travel by water in a vessel. c. To start out on such a voyage or journey. d. To operate a sailing craft, especially for sport. 2. To move along or progress smoothly or effortlessly: sailed into the room five minutes late; sailed through the exam; sailed through the red light. v.tr. Nautical 1. To navigate or manage (a vessel). 2. To voyage upon or across: sail the Pacific. Phrasal Verb: sail into To attack or criticize vigorously: sailed into the workmen for the shoddy job they were doing.
[Middle English seil, from Old English segl. Sail into, from obsolete sail, to attack, from Middle English sailen, short for assailen; see assail.] |
sail Noun 1. a sheet of canvas or other fabric, spread on rigging to catch the wind and move a ship over water 2. a voyage on such a ship: a relaxing sail across the lake 3. a ship or ships with sails: to travel by sail 4. one of the revolving arms of a windmill 5. set sail to begin a voyage by water 6. under sail a. under way b. with sail hoisted Verb 1. to travel in a boat or ship: to sail around the world 2. to begin a voyage: he hoped to sail at eleven 3. (of a ship) to move over the water 4. to navigate (a ship): she sailed the schooner up the channel 5. to sail over: he had already sailed the Pacific 6. to move along smoothly 7. sail into Informal to make a violent attack on 8. sail through to progress quickly or effortlessly: the top seed sailed through to the second round [Old English segl] Sail sailing vessels collectively, 1436; sails collectively, 1385; windmill sails collectively. Examples: sail of ducks, 1727; of ships, 1633; of Spaniards, 1458.
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | sail - a large piece of fabric (usually canvas fabric) by means of which wind is used to propel a sailing vesselfore-and-aft sail - any sail not set on a yard and whose normal position is in a fore-and-aft direction foresail - the lowest sail on the foremast of a square-rigged vessel reef - one of several strips across a sail that can be taken in or rolled up to lessen the area of the sail that is exposed to the wind headsail - any sail set forward of the foremast of a vessel mainsail - the lowermost sail on the mainmast royal - a sail set next above the topgallant on a royal mast save-all - a sail set to catch wind spilled from a larger sail skysail - the sail above the royal on a square-rigger square sail - a four-sided sail set beneath a horizontal yard suspended at the middle from a mast topsail - a sail (or either of a pair of sails) immediately above the lowermost sail of a mast and supported by a topmast | | 2. | sail - an ocean trip taken for pleasure | | 3. | sail - any structure that resembles a sailstructure, construction - a thing constructed; a complex entity constructed of many parts; "the structure consisted of a series of arches"; "she wore her hair in an amazing construction of whirls and ribbons" | | Verb | 1. | sail - traverse or travel on (a body of water); "We sailed the Atlantic"; "He sailed the Pacific all alone" | | 2. | sail - move with sweeping, effortless, gliding motions; "The diva swept into the room"; "Shreds of paper sailed through the air"; "The searchlights swept across the sky"move - move so as to change position, perform a nontranslational motion; "He moved his hand slightly to the right" swan - sweep majestically; "Airplanes were swanning over the mountains" sweep, brush - sweep across or over; "Her long skirt brushed the floor"; "A gasp swept cross the audience" | | 3. | sail - travel on water propelled by wind; "I love sailing, especially on the open sea"; "the ship sails on"run - sail before the wind boat - ride in a boat on water beat - sail with much tacking or with difficulty; "The boat beat in the strong wind" wear round, tack - turn into the wind; "The sailors decided to tack the boat"; "The boat tacked" wear ship - turn away from the wind; "The sailors decided it was time to wear ship" | | 4. | sail - travel on water propelled by wind or by other means; "The QE2 will sail to Southampton tomorrow"cruise - sail or travel about for pleasure, relaxation, or sightseeing; "We were cruising in the Caribbean" |
sail verb 2. go by water, cruise, voyage, ride the waves, go by sea verb 3. set sail, embark, get under way, put to sea, put off, leave port, hoist sail, cast or weigh anchor verb 5. glide, sweep, float, shoot, fly, wing, soar, drift, skim, scud, skirr sail through something cruise through, walk through, romp through, pass easily, succeed easily at set sail put to sea, embark, get under way, put off, leave port, hoist sail, cast or weigh anchor
Translations sail [seɪl] n ( on boat) → velathey sailed into Copenhagen → arribaron a Copenhague
sail [seɪl] n ( on boat) → voile f (= trip);
sail [seɪl] n → Segel nt
sail [seɪl] n [+ on boat] → vela (= trip): to go for a sail → fare un giro in barca a vela
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