Yes
Trireme
It was an oar and sail powered ship (galley) used in ancient times. The term "trireme" refers to having 3 rows of oars, which provided the maximum amount of power for that size of ship. While used extensively for travel on the Mediterranean, they were generally unsuited for ocean voyages.
The fighting gallery ship was commonly referred to as a "galleon" or "fighting galley." These vessels were designed for naval warfare and typically combined the features of a ship and a galley, utilizing both sails and oars. They were equipped with cannons and other armaments, making them formidable in battles during their time.
A Trireme or Galley.
The galley is the same as a mess hall or cafeteria.
The ship's kitchen is known as "The Galley".
A Row Boat Dinghy, skiff, wherry, gig, jolly boat, dory, galley, trireme,
The galley of a ship is the area used for food preparation and storage; AKA the kitchen or pantry. The term galley is also used on trains and aircraft.
The ship's kitchen is known as "The Galley".
You cook meals and clean up afterward. The galley is the kitchen in a ship (aircraft also use the term) where all the cooking is done for the crew or passengers. The familiar term 'galley slave' doesn't refer to this kind of galley, though. A 'galley slave' was a person compelled to row an ancient ship - called a galley - which was powered by numerous oars, and sometimes supplemented by sails.
Galley
a galley