"SWEATING the halyard" is pronounced as "sweating the HAL-yerd." The emphasis is typically placed on "HAL," and "halyard" is pronounced with two syllables. It refers to the process of tightening or adjusting the halyard, which is a rope used to raise and lower a sail on a boat.
Halyard!
The word sweating is an adjective.
Sweating is "perspiration" (when you sweat, you perspire).
How do you pronounce Baekje.
Brin is how you pronounce it
A halyard is used for hauling up a sail, such as a jib or mainsail. To haul up the jib, you would use the jib halyard...for the main, main halyard.
A halyard is related to boats, not plumbing.
Helen Halyard was born in 1951.
Operation Halyard happened in 1944-07.
A halyard is a rope used for raising or lowering something. An example sentence would be: Pull the halyard to raise the flag.
Ardie Clark Halyard has written: 'Interview with Ardie Clark Halyard' -- subject(s): African American women, Biography
A halyard is not related to plumbing at all. - It is a rope for controlling sails in a boat.
The word "halyard" is a noun. An example of a sentence using the word would be: The noise of the halyard clanging against the pole was familiar and comforting to the old sailor.
The halyard raises or lowers the sails. The term comes from "haul yards" as in hauling yards of sail.
No, a halyard is not the same as a pulley. A halyard is a rope or line used to raise and lower sails or flags on a vessel. In contrast, a pulley is a mechanical device that changes the direction of force, often used in conjunction with a halyard to make it easier to lift heavy objects. While they can work together, they serve different purposes in rigging and mechanical systems.
In nautical terms, the "halyards" are used to "haul the yards" of sail (up or down). The mainsail halyard is called the "main sheet", the jib sail halyard is called the "jib sheet" & the mizzen sail halyard is called the "mizzen sheet".
Halyard!