It depends on the ship, but it's generally trimmed on all 4 points - Bow, Stern, Port and Starboard, making adjustments as the load changes (e.g., weapons usage, food usage, etc.).
Type your answer here... by stern
The Front part of a boat or ship is known as the Bow.
I believe it was a big old twin stern double bow ship called dyversity.
The short easy answer is normally the bow and stern of the vessel. As the ship gets bigger this becomes more complicated.
Yes they did, and for much the same reason -- both were holed nearer to the bow than to the stern (the Titanic's hull plates were buckled in the first five compartments; the Lusitania was torpedoed below the bridge, making a vast hole in the starboard side of the ship), and both ships' forward motion forced more water into the ship, so that the bows sank first and in each case, the stern rose high above the surface before the ship took its final plunge.
Type your answer here... by stern
The bow is the front end of the ship, with the stern being the back end.
The opposite of stern is bow. The stern is in the aft, the bow fore.
The opposite of "bow" is "stern" (the rear of a ship).
the antonym of bow is stern
The Front part of a boat or ship is known as the Bow.
The bow is the front of the boat. The stern is the rear.
The rear of the ship is called the "stern". The front is called the "bow". The rear direction in a ship is "aft". (head "aft" to get to the "stern").
The stern is the back end of the ship, the bow is the front end of the ship. Aft means close to or toward the stern of the ship eg Move the luggage aft Forward means close to or toward the bow of a ship. eg Move the luggage forward
The front is called the bow, and the back is called the stern.
bow or prow
The " front "or forward part of a ship is called the bow the "back" or aft part of a ship is called the sternThe front of a ship is called the 'bow' or the 'prow'. The back of a ship is called the 'stern'.