No it represents a direction.
The term is "astern" as opposed to "ahead" (forward) It comes from the word stern, that means the rear of the boat, as opposite to the bow The nautical term for rearward, as in the direction, would be aft.
If you mean "due port" it is a direction in sailing/boating, due port is the nautical term for directly left
Yes. East by North (E x N), or 78.75 degrees, is between ENE and E.
It is 23 nautical miles from New London, Connecticut to Greenport, New York. To get there you would cross the Long Island Sound from the north and go in a southeasterly direction.
East is the direction of a flight from Minneapolis, Minnesota to Green Bay, Wisconsin. The total distance is 260 miles. So the equivalent in kilometers is 418, and 226 in nautical miles.
Yes, nautical is an adjective.
The distance from Columbus, Ohio's capital, to Oranjestad, Aruba's capital, is 2,052 miles.Specifically, that distance is equivalent to 3,303 kilometers. It is 1,783 nautical miles. The flight direction from Columbus to Oranjestad is south-southeast.
An synony for Nautical is deep-sea.
nautical is one of my favorite theme's
a nautical mile is 1.852 km and a mile is (statute)1.609344 km so a mile is bigger than a nautical mile
60 Nautical miles per degree, so 600 nautical miles.