epithets a sailor
epithets a calf
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noun One who sails; a seaman; a mariner; one of the crew of a ship or vessel. noun Synonyms Sailor, Seaman, Mariner. To most landsmen any one who leads a seafaring life is a sailor. ... Mariner is an elevated, poetic, or quaint term for a seaman; shipman is a still older term.
Calf definitions. Calf means a baby cow. The small cow nursing from the mother cow is an example of a calf. ... A young cow or bull.
Ephithets of a sailor-
Used typically to a uniformed sailor by, e.g., a waitress in a café. ‘Soldier’ would be similarly used.
Used typically to a uniformed sailor by, e.g., a waitress in a café. ‘Soldier’ would be similarly used. The jokey message ‘Hello, sailor’ was at one time a regular sight in British sea-side towns, displayed on funny hats worn by girls on the spree. ‘What think you, sailors?’ is said by Viola to those who have survived the ship-wreck in Twelfth Night (l:ii). As it happens, there is an instance of ‘my young soldier’ used vocatively in the same play (4:i).
Used typically to a uniformed sailor by, e.g., a waitress in a café. ‘Soldier’ would be similarly used. The jokey message ‘Hello, sailor’ was at one time a regular sight in British sea-side towns, displayed on funny hats worn by girls on the spree. ‘What think you, sailors?’ is said by Viola to those who have survived the ship-wreck in Twelfth Night (l:ii). As it happens, there is an instance of ‘my young soldier’ used vocatively in the same play (4:i). In The Trumpet Major, by Thomas Hardy, Jim Cornick innocently says in Anne Garland’s hearing that Robert Loveday, the man she loves, is courting another girl. Someone tries to prevent him from continuing, but Anne says: ‘Tell it all, sailor.’
Used typically to a uniformed sailor by, e.g., a waitress in a café. ‘Soldier’ would be similarly used. The jokey message ‘Hello, sailor’ was at one time a regular sight in British sea-side towns, displayed on funny hats worn by girls on the spree. ‘What think you, sailors?’ is said by Viola to those who have survived the ship-wreck in Twelfth Night (l:ii). As it happens, there is an instance of ‘my young soldier’ used vocatively in the same play (4:i). In The Trumpet Major, by Thomas Hardy, Jim Cornick innocently says in Anne Garland’s hearing that Robert Loveday, the man she loves, is courting another girl. Someone tries to prevent him from continuing, but Anne says: ‘Tell it all, sailor.’ In ordinary colloquial use, civilians might address a sailor as ‘sailor-boy’ or ‘sailorman’. The latter occurs in Shipmaster, by Gwyn Griffin, where one officer in a submarine says to another, jokingly, ‘Oh, you vile old sailorman!’
Ephithets of a calf-
noun, plural calves [kavz, kahvz].