Not Enough Room to Swing a Cat

£3.99

Not Enough Room to Swing a Cat

Naval slang and its everyday usage

Dialect, slang and jargon Military history

Author: Martin Robson

Dinosaur mascot

Language: English

Published by: Conway

Published on: 1 October 2012

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 176 pages

ISBN: 9781844861965


Introduction to Naval Slang

As the crow flies, chunder, cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey, three sheets to the wind - many terms like these are used in everyday English language conversation and writing. But how many landlubbers know that they derive from naval slang or know what the phrase originally referred to?

The navy has helped to shape modern society. The navy is famous for its traditions, quirks and nuances. It is disinctly different to wider society and nowhere is this more evident than in language. The naval community once had its own language, incomprehensible to anyone who was not a sailor, which described and explained his unique world.

But on shore leave these men introduced their language to the populations of bustling ports and harbours and the usage slowly spread inland. Today through the mediums of film, television and music, naval slang has been brought to the wider public and has become fully integrated into the English language to point where many phrases are used by people who have no concept of their meaning.

Content of the Book

Presenting terminology thematically, this book provides a compilation of naval slang throughout the world, from terms relating to ship-handling and seamanship through to food and drink, discipline and insults. The text is further enhanced with original black line drawings that illustrate certain technical terms, such as splice the mainbrace.

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