Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
Loggerhead
French translation:
balle à queue/boulet à queue
Added to glossary by
Mary Maclean
Apr 16, 2021 20:33
3 yrs ago
20 viewers *
English term
Loggerhead
English to French
Other
Ships, Sailing, Maritime
ships
An iron ball attached to a long handle, used for driving caulking into seams and [occasionally] in a fight.
Proposed translations
(French)
3 | balle à queue/boulet à queue | florence metzger |
References
Loggerhead | Althea Draper |
Proposed translations
1 day 17 hrs
Selected
balle à queue/boulet à queue
une suggestion...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thanks/Merci"
Reference comments
21 hrs
Reference:
Loggerhead
"One of the lesser known tools of the caulking trade was a "log of heat". This was an iron bar with a ball at each end which was put into the fire until red hot, and then placed into the pitch to keep it hot in the journey to the caulkers. (This tool soon became "loggerhead", and the term is still used today in describing two people who cannot agree!)"
MARITIME HERITAGE ASSOCIATION JOURNAL
Volume 6, No.3. September, 1995
Page 13
http://www.maritimeheritage.org.au/documents/MHA December 19...
"A loggerhead was a big chunk of iron, like a cannonball, with a long handle.
They were used by putting them into a fire to get them hot, then dunked into tar to heat the tar. The tar was then used along with flax or whatever, to make a caulk, which was driven into the ship's seams with a caulking iron.
I believe the term strike while the iron's hot has to do with getting the job done while the tar was still warm (the iron (loggerhead) was hot.
An additional term 'at loggerheads' which these days means at opposite sides of an argument, back then meant fighting with those loggerheads."
Cruisers Forum post #14
https://www.cruisersforum.com/forums/f129/sailing-idioms-223...
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 day 1 hr (2021-04-17 21:44:19 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
From The Concise Oxford Dictionary
"loggerhead - iron instrument with ball at end heated for melting pitch etc"
("pitch - tar distillation used for caulkin seams of ships")
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 day 1 hr (2021-04-17 21:56:10 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
Photograph here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loggerhead_(tool)#/media/File:...
MARITIME HERITAGE ASSOCIATION JOURNAL
Volume 6, No.3. September, 1995
Page 13
http://www.maritimeheritage.org.au/documents/MHA December 19...
"A loggerhead was a big chunk of iron, like a cannonball, with a long handle.
They were used by putting them into a fire to get them hot, then dunked into tar to heat the tar. The tar was then used along with flax or whatever, to make a caulk, which was driven into the ship's seams with a caulking iron.
I believe the term strike while the iron's hot has to do with getting the job done while the tar was still warm (the iron (loggerhead) was hot.
An additional term 'at loggerheads' which these days means at opposite sides of an argument, back then meant fighting with those loggerheads."
Cruisers Forum post #14
https://www.cruisersforum.com/forums/f129/sailing-idioms-223...
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 day 1 hr (2021-04-17 21:44:19 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
From The Concise Oxford Dictionary
"loggerhead - iron instrument with ball at end heated for melting pitch etc"
("pitch - tar distillation used for caulkin seams of ships")
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 day 1 hr (2021-04-17 21:56:10 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
Photograph here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loggerhead_(tool)#/media/File:...
Reference:
http://www.maritimeheritage.org.au/documents/MHA%20December%201995%20journal.pdf
http://www.cruisersforum.com/forums/f129/sailing-idioms-223963.html
Note from asker:
Thanks a lot |
Something went wrong...