1 nautical mile = 0.33 leagues.
The nautical term for a unit of speed when sailing or navigating a boat is the word knots. To measure a knot it is the unit of speed equal to one nautical mile approximately 1.151 mph.
Things nautical. The sea and ships.
1852m is one nautical mile.
1 nautical mile = approximately 1.151 miles.One mile = 5280 feetOne nautical mile = 6000 feetSo one nautical mile = 1.1363636 miles6000 ÷ 5280 = 1.13636361 nautical mile=1.15077945 milesThe formula is one land mile equals approximately .868 air miles.Air miles are also called nautical miles.
It is not a nautical term. It is a hand plunger to wash clothes by hand and is the brand name. It also has a picture of an imaginary CWS Invincible ship embossed on the side.
It can be. It can be a reference to sex. It can also mean a haircut, as in "just a trim." The word "trim" means either slim or slender, or to make something thinner or more slender.
The term "Trim Cruiser" is an old nautical reference used during the days of sailing vessels in the Navy, not a reference to a specific class of ship. A "Trim Cruiser" in nautical terms referred to a sailing ship whose sails were "trimmed", i.e., rigged to get the most out of the available wind. With modern vessels, it's a reference to a ship that's getting the best headway/speed given her propulsion and the current ocean environment in which it's operating.
Long term fuel trim, Bank 2
1 nautical mile = 0.33 leagues.
The nautical term for stopping a sailboat by pointing into the wind is "in irons."
Porthole.
Avast
Avast
what does "rigged to blow" mean? It sounds like an old nautical term.
If you mean "due port" it is a direction in sailing/boating, due port is the nautical term for directly left
Leftovers...odds and ends...random pieces of equipment It is also a nautical term for extra supplies or perquisites.