I believe the term you are looking for is "bow wave."
Prow
Bowella
Christopher Columbus used the type of sailing vessel called a caravel. Caravels were a common sailing ship built in the 15th and 16th centuries. They were small ships with a broad bow, a high narrow poop deck, and usually had three masts.
It is called the bow of the ship.
The short easy answer is normally the bow and stern of the vessel. As the ship gets bigger this becomes more complicated.
Its called the bow. As in you bow to an audience.
A bow is a front of a ship
it is the ships bow
Bow waves are created by ships as they move through water, resulting from the displacement of water at the vessel's bow. As the ship travels forward, it pushes water aside, creating a wave that travels outward from the front of the vessel. The size and shape of the bow wave depend on factors such as the ship's speed, hull design, and water depth. These waves can affect navigation and the environment, potentially causing erosion and impacting other vessels.
it is the ships bow
bow
Possibly you mean the 'bow wave' - the frothy water thrown up at the bow (front) of the ship.
The front end of the ship is called the "Bow". On early ships many had what was called an "Forecastle" which was on the bow of the ship. This raised "castle" was useful in observing the enemy's decks.
They often "surf" the bow wake of large ships appearing to pilot the ship.
The titanic is a ship that sank in the early 1900`s!
it is a ships body
Stop the ship.