Verb - To anchor Noun - An anchor
The links mean nothing. Rope is sometimes portrayed. Either where used to anchor ships in the age of sail.
Purdoink
fheta
It could mean they are in the Navy, or it could be symbolic for stability. An anchor with roses could represent a stable relationship.
The anchor represents hope; the cross is faith and the heart is for charity.
An anchor with roses mean that on a guy/girl, their partner is what keeps them stable and strong. If they have a regular anchor usually it's just To remind themselves to stay strong and stable. The anchor is really something you decide the meaning of though.
anchor
It's a phrase that's often misunderstood. It means to pull up a ship's anchor. It's the opposite of "to drop anchor".
No it cannot, the Anchor Handlers are required to set up a mooring patterns which hold the vessel in position. If the vessel is not in position then it cannot lay a platform or a pipeline down in a specified position. A DLB cannot lay these anchors on its own as they are set up as far as 2km away. Short answer, NO.
The anchor symbol on old sterling silver typically represents that the item was made in Birmingham, England. It is a hallmark that signifies the standard of purity for the silver content in the item.
lay down