to leeward Meaning in Bengali
Noun:
অনুবাত করতে,
Similer Words:
to letto me
to no degree
to no purpose
to order
to perfection
to some extent
to start with
to string up
to such an extent
to that
to that degree
to that effect
to that extent
to the contrary
to leeward's Usage Examples:
racers will still hike to prevent unnecessary heeling, or leaning sideways to leeward, because the more vertical in the water the keel is, the more effective.
The sails of a boat disrupt the wind to leeward; this disruption is often called "dirt" or "dirty air".
There is little or no force causing the boat to heel to leeward, unlike most other points of sailing, and, if the sail is out past perpendicular.
cornered the King's frigate Fleur de Lis in Freshwater Bay, a little to leeward of Port-de-Paix; her crew too set her on fire.
Two of his ships, standing to leeward, escaped into port, leaving him with thirty ships-of-the-line.
Boats towed Majestic out of the bay where she was allowed to drift to leeward.
Hawaiian weather terminology, the winter Kona storms that bring rain to leeward areas are associated with Lono.
provide lift or ballast, depending on whether it is designed to be used to leeward or windward; on a trimaran it is designed primarily to provide lift.
It is sailed so that one hull is kept to windward, and the other to leeward.
But an opponent to leeward could always baffle this attack by edging away, and in the meantime fire.
executed by downing all sails, battening the hatches and locking the tiller to leeward so the boat tries to point to windward but this is balanced by the force.
Yawl, which was steering a course to intercept several merchant vessels to leeward.
The opposing warship to leeward could often do little but comply without exposing itself unduly.
about 25 minutes after the start of the action, having by then drifted to leeward and fallen astern of Redoutable.
Leeway is the amount of drift motion to leeward of an object floating in the water caused by the component of the wind vector that is perpendicular to.
vang is to reduce the twist in the sail caused by the gaff "sagging away to leeward".
first-rate but shorter meant they handled poorly and had a tendency to sail to leeward; HMS Prince was described by one of her lieutenants as sailing "like a.
confidently in the judgment of her master, she kept, on the average, 200 miles to leeward of the right track.
Synonyms:
leeward side; leeward;
Antonyms:
windward; downwind; direction;