Becalm
to deprive (a sailing vessel) of the wind necessary to move it; subject to a calm:
the schooner was becalmed in the horse lat-tudes for two weeks.
archaic. to calm; pacify.
historical examples
one sail is also said to becalm another when the wind is aft.
practical boat-sailing douglas frazar
ships are generally obliged to be towed into the harbor, in consequence of the high points which tower high, and becalm them.
torrey’s narrative william torrey
an imprisoned man who asks for an italian book to becalm his fever may be safely presumed to know that language.
fray luis de len james fitzmaurice-kelly
becalm, and henceforth think that the peril is mine, not yours.
the memoires of casanova, complete jacques casanova de seingalt
i am making a sail according to your lordship’s plan, to becalm the hull of the ship, but want sailcloth for completing it.
the life of thomas, lord cochrane, tenth earl of dundonald, vol. ii thomas lord cochrane
v.
1550s, from be- + calm. related: becalmed; becalming.
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