Dictionary Definition
boat
Noun
1 a small vessel for travel on water
2 a dish (often boat-shaped) for serving gravy or
sauce [syn: gravy boat,
gravy
holder, sauceboat]
v : ride in a boat on water
User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
bāt.Noun
- A craft used for transportation of goods, fishing, racing, recreational cruising, or military use on or in the water, propelled by oars or outboard motor or inboard motor or by wind.
- In the context of "poker slang}} A full house
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
A boat is a watercraft designed to float
or plane on water, and provide transport over it. Usually this
water will be inland (lakes) or in protected coastal areas.
However, boats such as the whaleboat were designed to be
operated from a ship in an
offshore environment. In naval terms, a boat is something small
enough to be carried aboard another vessel (a ship). Some boats too large for the
naval definition include the Great Lakes
freighter, riverboat, narrowboat and ferryboat. Modern submarines can also be called
boats, despite their underwater capabilities and size. This may be
because the first submarines could be carried by a ship and were
not capable of making independent offshore passages. Boats may be
used by the military or other government interests, or for research
or commercial purposes; but regardless of size, a vessel in
private, non-commercial usage is almost certainly a boat.
History
The oldest recovered boat in the world is the
canoe of Pesse; it is a dugout or hollowed tree trunk
from a Pinus
sylvestris. According to C14 dating analysis it has been
constructed somewhere between 8200 and 7600 B.C. This canoe is
exhibited in the Drents Museum in Assen, Netherlands.
Boats have served as a method for short distance
transportation since early times, on slow rivers and calm seas.
Circumstantial evidence, such as the
early settlement of Australia over 40,000 years ago, suggests
that boats have been used since very ancient times. The earliest
boats have been predicted to be logboats,
or possibly boats made from hide or tree bark. The
oldest boats to be found by archaeological excavation are logboats
from around 7000-9,000 years ago, though a 7000 year-old seagoing
boat made from reeds and tar has been found in Kuwait.
Being more capacious than carts and wagons, and
suitable for both slow rivers and calm seas, boats were used
between 4000BCE-3000BCE in Sumer, and in the
Indian
Ocean. Evidence of varying models of boats has also been
discovered in various Indus Valley sites.
Types
Unusual boats have been used for sports purposes - for example, in "big bathtub races" which use boats made from bathtubs. Pumpkins have been used as boats as in the annual Pumpkin Boat Race on Lake Otsego in New York, United States.Parts and terminology
Common to most boats are several key components
which make up the main structure of the boat. The hull is
the main structural component of the boat which provides buoyancy
for the boat. The roughly horizontal, but cambered structures
spanning the hull of the boat are referred to as the deck. In a
ship there are often several decks, but a boat is unlikely to have
more than one. Above the deck are the superstructures.
The underside of a deck is the deck head.
An enclosed space on a boat is referred to as a
cabin. Several individual structures make up a cabin: the similar
but usually lighter structure which spans a raised cabin is a
coach-roof. The "floor" of a cabin is properly known as the sole,
but is more likely to be called the floor (a floor is properly, a
structural member which ties a frame to the keelson and keel). The
vertical surfaces dividing the internal space are bulkheads.
The keel is a lengthwise structural member to
which the frames are fixed (sometimes referred to as a
backbone).
The front of a boat is called the bow or prow.
Boats of earlier eras often featured a figurehead
protruding from the front of the bows. The rear of the boat is
called the stern. The right side is starboard and the left side is
port.
Building materials
seealso Boat buildingUntil the mid 19th century most boats were of all
natural materials; primarily wood. Many boats had been built with
iron or steel frames but still planked in wood. In 1855
ferro-cement boat construction was patented by yothe French. They
called it Ferciment. This is a system by which a steel or iron wire
framework is built in the shape of a boat's hull and covered
(troweled) over with
cement. Reinforced with bulkheads and other internal structure it
is strong but heavy, easily repaired, and, if sealed properly, will
not leak or corrode. These materials and methods were copied all
over the world, and have faded in and out of popularity to the
present. As the forests of Britain and Europe continued to be
over-harvested to supply the keels of larger wooden boats, and the
Bessemer
Process (patented in 1855) cheapened the cost of steel, steel
ships and boats began to be more common. By the 1930s boats built
of all steel from frames to plating were seen replacing wooden
boats in many industrial uses, even the fishing fleets. Private
recreational boats in steel are uncommon. In the mid 20th century
aluminum gained popularity. Though much more expensive than steel,
there are now aluminum alloys available that will not corrode in
salt water, and an aluminum boat built to similar load carrying
standards could be built lighter than steel. Nonetheless, boats are
generally built in such a manner as to keep water from invading the
hull, which would cause the boats to sink.
Around the mid 1960s, boats made out of glass-reinforced
plastic, more commonly known as fiberglass, became popular,
especially for recreational boats. The
coast guard refers to such boats as 'FRP' (for Fiberglass
Reinforced Plastic) boats. Fiberglass boats are extremely strong,
and do not rust (iron oxide), corrode, or rot. They are, however
susceptible to structural degradation from sunlight and extremes in
temperature over their lifespan. Fiberglass provides structural
strength, especially when long woven strands are laid, sometimes
from bow to stern, and then soaked in epoxy or polyester resin to
form the hull of the boat. Whether hand laid or built in a mold,
FRP boats usually have an outer coating of gelcoat which is a thin
solid colored layer of polyester resin that adds no structural
strength, but does create a smooth surface which can be buffed to a
high shine and also acts as a protective layer against sunlight.
FRP structures can be made stiffer with sandwich panels, where the
FRP encloses a lightweight core such as balsa or foam. Cored FRP is
most often found in decking which helps keep down weight that will
be carried above the waterline. The addition of wood makes the
cored structure of the boat susceptible to rotting which puts a
greater emphasis on not allowing damaged sandwich structures to go
unrepaired. Plastic based foam cores are less vulnerable. The
phrase 'advanced composites' in FRP construction may indicate the
addition of carbon fiber, kevlar(tm) or other similar materials,
but it may also indicate other methods designed to introduce less
expensive and, by at least one yacht surveyor's eyewitness accounts
http://www.yachtsurvey.com/Fiberglass_Boats.htm,
less structurally sound materials.
Cold molding is similar to FRP in as much as it
involves the use of epoxy or polyester resins, but the structural
component is wood instead of fiberglass. In cold molding very thin
strips of wood are laid over a form or mold in layers. This layer
is then coated with resin and another directionally alternating
layer is laid on top. In some processes the subsequent layers are
stapled or otherwise mechanically fastened to the previous layers,
but in other processes the layers are weighted or even vacuum
bagged to hold layers together while the resin sets. Layers are
built up thus to create the required thickness of hull.
People have even made their own boats or
watercraft out of commonly available materials such as styrofoam or plastic, but most
homebuilts today are built of plywood and either painted or covered
in a layer of fiberglass and resin.
Propulsion
The most common means are:- Human power (rowing, paddling, setting pole etc.)
- Wind power (sailing)
- Motor powered screws
- Inboard
- Internal Combustion (gasoline, diesel, heavy fuel oil)
- Steam (Coal, fuel oil)
- Nuclear (for submarines and large naval ships)
- Inboard/Outboard
- Gasoline
- Diesel
- Outboard
- Gasoline
- Electric
- Paddle Wheel
- Water Jet (Jet ski, Personal water craft, Jetboat)
- Air Fans (Hovercraft, Air boat)
- Inboard
Buoyancy
seealso BuoyancyA boat stays afloat because its weight is equal
to that of the water it displaces.
The material of the boat itself may be heavier than water (per
volume), but it forms only the outer layer. Inside it is air, which
is negligible in weight. But it does add to the volume. The central
term here is density,
which is mass ('weight')
per volume. The mass of
the boat (plus contents) as a whole has to be divided by the volume
below the waterline. If the boat floats, then that is equal to the
density of water (1 kg/l). To the water it is as if there is water
there because the average density is the same. If weight is added
to the boat, the volume below the waterline will have to increase
too, to keep the mass/weight balance equal, so the boat sinks a
little to compensate.
Notes
References
- Denemark, Robert Allen; el al. (2000). World System History: The Social Science of Long-Term Change. Routledge. ISBN 0415232767.
- McGrail, Sean (2004). Boats of the World: From the Stone Age to Medieval Times. USA: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199271860.
External links
- WhatBoat? Boat Magazine
- Sailboats database: sailboat data sheets all over the world
- Hull Identification Numbers Explanation of International HIN formats
- University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections -- Freshwater and Marine Image Bank -- Vessels Images of boats and vessels.
boat in Arabic: قارب
boat in Bengali: নৌকা
boat in Bulgarian: Лодка
boat in Catalan: Embarcació
boat in Czech: Člun
boat in Welsh: Cwch
boat in Danish: Båd
boat in German: Boot
boat in Estonian: Paat
boat in Modern Greek (1453-): Βάρκα
boat in Spanish: Bote
boat in Esperanto: Boato
boat in Persian: قایق
boat in French: Bateau
boat in Korean: 보트
boat in Croatian: Čamac
boat in Indonesian: Perahu
boat in Icelandic: Bátur
boat in Italian: Imbarcazione
boat in Hebrew: סירה
boat in Latin: Linter
boat in Maltese: Dgħajsa
boat in Malay (macrolanguage): Perahu
boat in Dutch: Boot (vaartuig)
boat in Norwegian: Båt
boat in Norwegian Nynorsk: Båt
boat in Narom: Baté
boat in Polish: Łódź (jednostka pływająca)
boat in Portuguese: Barco
boat in Romanian: Barcă
boat in Quechua: Wamp'u
boat in Russian: Лодка
boat in Simple English: Boat
boat in Slovenian: Čoln
boat in Serbian: Чамац
boat in Serbo-Croatian: Čamac
boat in Finnish: Vene
boat in Swedish: Båt
boat in Tamil: படகு
boat in Thai: เรือ
boat in Turkish: Gemi
boat in Vietnamese: Thuyền máy
boat in Ukrainian: Човен
boat in Chinese: 艇
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
almadia, argosy, ark, auto, autocar, automobile, auxiliary, barge, bark, bottom, bucket, buggy, bus, buss, canoe, car, cargo boat, carry sail,
cart, cat, catamaran, circumnavigate, coach, coast, cockle, cockleshell, cog, coracle, craft, crate, cross, cruise, cruiser, cutter, dinghy, dispatch boat, dray, drifter, dugout, ferry, ferryboat, fishing boat,
float, funny, galley, gig, glider, go by ship, go on
shipboard, go to sea, gondola, haul, heap, hooker, houseboat, hoy, hulk, hull, hydrofoil, hydroplane, jalopy, jolly, jolly boat, kayak, keel, knockabout, launch, leviathan, lifeboat, lighter, longboat, machine, mailer, make a passage, motor, motor vehicle, motorboat, motorcar, motorized vehicle,
navigate, outboard, outrigger canoe,
packet, pilot, pilot boat, pinnace, piragua, pirogue, ply, pontoon, post boat, pram, punt, racer, racing shell, raft, randan, row, rowboat, rowing boat, run, runabout, sail, sail round, sail the sea,
sailboat, sampan, scooter, scow, scull, seafare, shallop, shell, ship, showboat, skiff, sled, sledge, small boat, sneakbox, speedboat, steam, steamboat, surfboat, take a voyage,
towboat, traverse, trawlboat, trawler, trimaran, trow, truck, tub, tug, tugboat, van, vessel, voiture, voyage, wagon, wanigan, watercraft, whale-gig,
whaleboat, wheelbarrow, wheels, wherry, wreck, yacht, yawl, yawl boat