Boats and ships are not the same, though they are both types of watercraft. Generally, the distinction lies in size and capability: boats are smaller and often used for recreational purposes, while ships are larger vessels designed for transporting goods or passengers over long distances. Ships usually have the capability to navigate open seas, whereas boats are often limited to inland waters or coastal areas. Additionally, ships are equipped with more complex systems and facilities compared to boats.
As far as I am quite sure, there were definitely ships... and paddle boats.
The same things we use. Cars, buses, trains, ships, boats.
Shipwrights made boats and ships
boats lokklike
The viking boats were called tall ships
The same as they are in any other industrialised nation - railroads, aircraft, automobiles, boats and ships.
No, a U-boat is a submarine. A torpedo boat is the boat that destroys the submarine.
boats
yes ships dock their boats at the harbor.
Small ships are usually called boats.
German u-boats attacked the ships by going up to them and shooting cannons at them and then the ships would fall deep under the sea.
Ships go back into history for thousands of years. Ancient Egypt had boats, the Vikings, ancient Chinese had war ships with flame throwers in the bow. The Romans had war ships, and the Greeks had ships for trade. Ships and boats use goes so far back in time that it is impossible to know who invented them.