vase, pot
a vase
vase, flowerpot
Vase
Flurucus 2:17 Put colour into thy vessel and thou shalt see change in thy colour of thy flowers. or Fudacolorus 4:28 And the Lord spaketh "Put colour in thy flower vessel, and thy flowers shall change in colour."
Vessels that hold flowers are called pots or containers. They may be made of clay, plastic, or woven fibers. Some containers are called vases. Flower show judges prefer the term container to vase.
Angiosperms are plants that produce flowers and fruits.Specifically, the name combines the Greek words angeion("vessel") and spermos ("relating to seed"). It designates seeds which are enclosed in ovaries. The ovaries ultimately turn into fruits, and its ovules ultimately turn into the seeds of the plant's fruits.
the PWC
Place a vessel loop twice around a vessel so that if you put tension on the vessel loop, it will occlude the vessel.
The vessel being "overtaken" is the stand-on vessel. The vessel "overtaking" is the give-way vessel.
That depends on what you mean by "vessel". Vessels on a vase could simply look like pictures of boats as decoration on a vase. Otherwise the meaning of vessel and vase is somewhat interchageable, vessel can mean bowl or tube so the term vessel is often used to describe a vase that is more pot-like in shape, or has a pot-like segment with a fluted top while "vase" in its specific sense is used to describe the very narrow tube-like structure people use to hold single flowers. As vessel also means tube-like structure (as in "blood vessel") it's possible that a vessel on a vase could be a a small tube coming from a larger vase designed to hold and pour liquid.
When a sailing vessel and a pwc are meeting head on the sailing vessel is the stand on vessel.
When the motorized vessel is a commercial vessel or when the motorized vessel has another vessel or person in tow.