ship of the line
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A large, heavily armed sailing warship of the 17th through the mid-19th centuries, built and used primarily to fight in the line of battle, a naval tactic where ships formed a line to fire broadsides at the enemy fleet.
Usage
The term "ship of the line" specifically refers to the most powerful class of wooden warship during the Age of Sail, distinguished by its size, number of guns, and role in fleet engagements. * The HMS Victory, Lord Nelson's flagship at the Battle of Trafalgar, is a famous example of a ship of the line. * By the early 1800s, a first-rate ship of the line carried 100 or more cannons on three gun decks.
Advanced Usage
- Historical Context: The classification "ship of the line" became formalized in the rating system of the British Royal Navy, which categorized warships based on their number of guns. Only the largest (typically third-rate and above, with 64+ guns) were powerful enough to stand in the line of battle.
- Evolution and Obsolescence: The development of ironclad warships and naval artillery in the mid-19th century rendered the wooden ship of the line obsolete.
Variants and Related Words
- Man-of-war: A general, often older term for an armed naval vessel, which includes ships of the line but also other warships.
- Line-of-battle ship: A direct synonym and the phrase from which "ship of the line" is derived.
- Battleship: The steel-hulled, steam-powered successor to the ship of the line, fulfilling a similar role as the primary capital ship of a fleet.
Synonyms
- Line-of-battle ship
- Capital ship (in its historical context)
- Battleship (as its successor)
Antonyms
- Frigate: A lighter, faster warship used for scouting and escort duties, not intended to fight in the line of battle.
- Sloop-of-war: A smaller, single-decked warship.
- Merchantman: A commercial cargo ship, not a warship.
Related Idioms and Phrases
- To sail in the line: Refers to the specific tactical formation that defined the ship's purpose.
- A first-rate ship: Originally a classification for the largest ships of the line (100+ guns); now an idiom meaning something of the highest quality.
Noun
- a warship intended for combat