- Anchor
- Drop anchor
- Fix firmly
- Flat ground
- Heathland
- Make fast (ship)
- Make fast a vessel
- Firmly fixed
- Fixed
- Makes safe
- Safe
- Safe and sound due to rescue operation
- Security, protection from danger
- Tie down
- Bind
- Commercial bond
- Connection
- Interconnection
- Keep busy with what you do to loose ends
- Make fast connection
- Merger
- Fast sailing ship
- A name given to several kinds of vessels.
- The caravel of the 16th century was a small vessel with
broad bows, high, narrow poop, four masts, and lateen sails. Columbus
commanded three caravels on his great voyage.
- A Portuguese vessel of 100 or 150 tons burden.
- A small fishing boat used on the French coast.
- A Turkish man-of-war.
- Fast sailing ship
- Fast sailing ship for Barber?
- Ship
- One who clips; specifically, one who clips off the edges
of coin.
- A machine for clipping hair, esp. the hair of horses.
- A vessel with a sharp bow, built and rigged for fast
sailing.
- Avert
- Cease
- Cease making pots
- Come to a conclusion
- Desist
- Discontinue
- Final word
- Impose by trickery
- Nothing in fist to palm off
- Put surreptitiously
- A light and fast-sailing ship.
- To insert surreptitiously, wrongfully, or without
warrant; to interpolate; to pass off (something spurious or
counterfeit) as genuine, true, or worthy; -- usually followed by in.
- A foister; a sharper.
- A trick or fraud; a swindle.
- Bomb-lobbing device
- Explosive device
- Howitzer
- Large piece of artillery
- A strong vessel, commonly in form of an inverted bell, in
which substances are pounded or rubbed with a pestle.
- A short piece of ordnance, used for throwing bombs,
carcasses, shells, etc., at high angles of elevation, as 45¡, and even
higher; -- so named from its resemblance in shape to the utensil above
described.
- A building material made by mixing lime, cement, or plaster
of Paris, with sand, water, and sometimes other materials; -- used in
masonry for joining stones, bricks, etc., also for plastering, and in
other ways.