Yes, if a sink is on a ship that is sinking, it would be considered a "sinking sink" in a playful sense. The term "sinking" applies to the ship as a whole, and since the sink is part of that structure, it would also be sinking as the ship descends. Thus, in this context, the phrase captures both the literal and humorous aspects of the situation.
The prow; the front of the ship.
To show dignity. They don't have to sink with their ship, but it shows integrity and pride. The captain is in charge of sailing the ship and keeping everybody on it safe.
HMS surprise
The Titanic was claimed to be the ship that cannot sink. However looking back at history we can see this was a fatal mistake.
The HMS warrior is a iron/steel ship - steam powered - the HMS Victory is wooden construction, sail powered. The HMS warrior is a Frigate, the HMS Victory a Ship-of-the-Line.
The HMS warrior is a iron/steel ship - steam powered - the HMS Victory is wooden construction, sail powered. The HMS warrior is a Frigate, the HMS Victory a Ship-of-the-Line.
The HMS Dauntless ship was made in January 2007. HMS Dauntless is the second ship of the Type 45 which is built for the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom.
HMS is His Majesteys Ship, a ship of the Royal Navy, a warship.
HMS = Her/His Majesty's Ship. Used by the British Royal Navy for longer tittles as "His/Her Mayesty's Ship", abbreviated H.M.S. and then HMS.
It was a ship
HMS Victory was launched on May 7, 1765.
The HMS Beagle. (HMS means, His/Hers Majesties Ship )
It was about a ship named "HMS Pinafore" in the navy.
HMS Beagle
It wasn't his personal ship, it belonged to the Royal Navy - it was called HMS Beagle.
To purposely sink a ship is to 'scuttle' the ship.