In the 1600s sailors ate much like they did in the 1400s. They ate flat hard bread which we now call hard-tack. When it was available they ate salt pork or beef. They had no fresh fruit or vegetables, so lots died of scurvy. They never drank water because they had discovered that after a week or two it was unfit for drinking. Instead they drank wine, beer or in the britts case rum.
Very simple - Rum & Coke, also known as DRC (Dark Rum and Coke).
Favourite brands include: Mount Gay, Captain Morgan and less so, Lamb's Navy Rum and Myer's.
a deit of salt meat
hard biscuit
sauerkarut
Beans :) and bread
The term 'brave sailors' is a noun phrase; the adjective 'brave' describing the plural, common noun 'sailors'.The noun 'sailors' is a word for people who sail boats or people who are crew members on a commercial or naval ship.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.A proper noun for the common noun 'sailors' is the names of the sailors.
food, mostly.
food
Grog, aka Rum
Maleria
Scurvy
an 8 letter word with a c in it
to preserve it
They have a hole on the bottom of them that sucks up the food that brushes across the bottom of their body...
Sailors. Many long trips across the ocean left them deficient in vitamin C. Later sailors ate Limes on the ships for their vitamin C. Sailors were then known as Limeys.
He he he good question. well sailors catch food like fish and go out to sea. so basicly they dont do lots but they do something
Yes, the noun 'sailors' is a common noun, the plural form of the noun sailor; a word for any person whose job it is to work as a member of the crew of a boat or ship.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for sailors is the names of the sailors or:Sailors For The Sea (non-profit organization), Newport, RIThe United States Coast Guard Lightship Sailors Association International, Inc., Chula Vista, CASoldiers & Sailors Memorial Hospital, Penn Yan, NY