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The Sailor's Illustrated Dictionary [Hardcover]

Thompson Lenfestey (Author), Prof. T. Lenfestey (Author)
1.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 1, 2001
Here is a comprehensive lexicon of more than 9,000 terms and phrases used by sailors and seafarers both past and present.

Have you ever been caught in the doldrums? Can you spot the difference between a ketch and a yawl? Do you know when you are ready to jibe or whether one "fakes" or "flakes" a line?

The richly diverse language of contemporary seafaring is a curious blend of terms, reflecting generations of the sailor's enterprise. Some of the oldest terms still retain their original meanings from before Shakespeare's day; other old terms have subtly shifted meaning over the years. Still others, brand-new and freshly minted from desktop computers, spring up fully jargoned and acronymed. Thompson Lenfestey's The Sailor's Illustrated Dictionary, the most modern, comprehensive and accurate reference of its kind to appear in forty years, gathers more than 9,000 nautical terms and makes sense of them. It covers the whole scope of contemporary seafaring--from supertankers to dinghies, from naval warfare to pleasure yachting, and from sail to oar.

While The Sailor's Illustrated Dictionary is rich in the lore of the sea, it is also written in clear, accessible language, with a practical hand trained by years of seafaring experience. You will find parts of speech, unusual pronunciations, and, when needed, examples of appropriate usage, as well as illustrations showing subjects as wide ranging as knots, cloud formation, navigation lights, and silhouettes of sail and power vessels. This is an essential reference work to own, whether you are a merchant shipper, a racing yachter, or a Navy sailor, not to mention a historian, writer, or just anyone who loves the sea.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

A thoroughly practical and up-to-date guide to nautical usage for today's mariner. -- K.B. Raisch, Cheif Warrant Officer USCG Eagle

From the Back Cover

Have you ever been caught in the doldrums? Can you spot the difference between a ketch and a yawl? Do you know when you are ready to jibe or whether one "fakes" or "flakes" a line? This richly diverse language of contemporary seafaring is a curious blend of terms, reflecting generations of the sailor's enterprise. Some of the oldest terms still retain their original meanings from before Shakespeare's day; other old terms have subtly shifted meaning over the years. Still others, brand-new and freshly minted from desktop computers, spring up fully jargoned and acronymed. Thompson Lenfestey's The Sailor's Illustrated Dictionary, the most modern , comprehensive and accurate reference of its kind to appear in forty years, gathers more than 9,000 nautical terms and makes sense of them. It covers the whole scope of contemporary seafaring - from supertankers to dinghies, from naval warfare to pleasure yachting, and from sail to oar. This is an essential reference work to own, whether you are a merchant shipper, a racing yachter, or a Navy sailor, not to mention a historian, writer, or just anyone who loves the sea. (8 1/4 x 10 1/4, 564 pages, illustrations)

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Lyons Press; 1st edition (June 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1585742813
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585742813
  • Product Dimensions: 10.2 x 8.4 x 1.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 1.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,968,755 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Very Disappointed, September 6, 2005
By 
Nadia Mills "mtlsun" (Montreal, QC, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It should be called the Sailors Dictionary. (not illustrated dictionary) We just purchased our first sailboat and i was looking for illustrations and terms to enhance our sailboat terminology. There are very very little illustrations, maybe a dozen stick man type illustrations in the entire book. You have to know the word you are looking for.
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2.0 out of 5 stars He left out the key!, May 30, 2011
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I am writing this primarily because I noticed that as of this date, only one person has posted a review of THE SAILOR'S ILLUSTRATED DICTIONARY and she gave it one star. While I have to say I agree with her criticisms, I don't entirely agree with her rating, so I thought I'd weigh in on this book to give the perspective buyer a little more information to work with.

It is true that the claim of this book being "illustrated" is very weak, almost to the point of being fraudulent. In a book over 500 pages, there are only about 40 illustrations, and they are very simple diagrams, graphs or schematic-type drawings. It is also true that the way the book is organized it is almost useless for landlubbers like yours truly, because it is set up in a catch-22 sort of way, where you have to know the name of the thing you are looking for to get the definition. Obviously, if I knew the name of the thing, I wouldn't be looking it up, and since there are no labeled, fold-out master diagrams of boats and ships to work with, I can't do what I really need to do -- find a drawing of the thing and then identify it by its label. Had Captain Lenfestey thought of this, or had he been allowed to do it by the publisher, this book would have rated five stars instead of a paltry two.

I'm not sure if that entirely makes my point clear, so I'll give you an example. I have a book on airplanes, and for each airplane listed there is a numbered blueprint of the plane which labels every part. Thus, if I want to know what that pointy knob at the center of the propeller is, I can trace my finger down and see that it is called a "boss." Takes 3 seconds and solves the problem. Of course, Lenfestey is not merely describing parts of a ship (or boat) but also concepts, ideas, and other intangibles; so doing this would have required a total reorganization of the information. It would have been expensive, complicated and hard. But it also would have saved the book.

Now, despite these very serious flaws, the book is still useful if a) you have some pre-existing knowledge of nautical terminology, and/or b) you have other books which contain the type of labeled diagrams I mentioned. 8,500 terms is a lot of definitions, and if only the reader had the proper key to unlock the knowledge, he would find this a very useful manual. As it is, it's like a locked box with the key missing.













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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
aback adv. With wind on the forward side of a square sail. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
charter party term, beam phr, chart sounding datum, stocked anchor, load line marks, actual total loss, summer load line, lower masthead, stowage factor, deck device, freeboard deck, navigation rules, lighted aid, designed waterline, phonetic word, computed altitude, mast cap, triangular sail set, buoyage system, senior ship, higher high water, hauling part, nautical usage, tidal day, vertical keel
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Coast Guard, Gulf Stream, World War, North Atlantic, Royal Navy, Great Britain, Indian Ocean, North Pacific, Topographic Center, Great Lakes, Southern Hemisphere, South America, Atlantic Ocean, Naval Reserve, Cape Horn, Defense Mapping Agency Hydrographic, Marine Corps, Secretary of the Navy, South Pacific, South Pole, United Kingdom, Frank Farrar, Gulf of Mexico, Mississippi River
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