Associations to the word «Frigate»
Noun
- Tripoli
- Tow
- Armament
- Batavia
- Intercept
- Sailing
- Collingwood
- Phoebe
- Minerva
- Aegis
- Mast
- Harbour
- Karel
- Horatio
- Loch
- Chaser
- Hazard
- Piracy
- Gunnery
- Tack
- Portsmouth
- Firepower
- Valour
- Lynx
- Decker
- Gama
- Captain
- Trafalgar
- Triton
- Azores
- Seaman
- Perry
- Aubrey
- Algiers
- Corsair
- Ff
- Tanker
- Madeira
- Aden
- Helicopter
- Commissioning
- Warfare
- Mauritius
- Halifax
- Combatant
- Anchorage
- Despatch
- Command
- Naval
- Launcher
- Leopard
- Yarmouth
- Whaler
- Nelson
- Hull
- Capture
- Unicorn
- Sirius
- Constellation
- Manoeuvre
- Anchor
- Bu
- Tuna
- Mortar
- Deck
- Bonaparte
- Havre
- Shipbuilding
- Chatham
- Pelican
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
FRIGATE, noun. (nautical) An obsolete type of sailing warship with a single continuous gun deck, typically used for patrolling, blockading, etc, but not in line of battle.
FRIGATE, noun. (nautical) A 19th c. type of warship combining sail and steam propulsion, typically of ironclad timber construction, supplementing and superseding sailing ships of the battle line until made obsolete by the development of the solely steam-propelled iron battleship.
FRIGATE, noun. (nautical) A modern type of warship, smaller than a destroyer, originally (WWII) introduced as an anti-submarine vessel but now general purpose.
FRIGATE BIRD, noun. Alternative spelling of frigatebird
Dictionary definition
FRIGATE, noun. A medium size square-rigged warship of the 18th and 19th centuries.
FRIGATE, noun. A United States warship larger than a destroyer and smaller than a cruiser.
Wise words
He who speaks without modesty will find it difficult to make
his words good.