What do “high sea” and “carry” mean in this sentence? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat does “fat and flat range” mean in this context?Difference between “Carry on” and “Carry on with”The difference between 'beneath the sea' and 'under the sea'What does the high point meanWhat does 'high temple' mean?What does “do sea on classes” mean?What does mean this sentenceWhat does “hype high on java” mean?What is mean “cover grammar”What does this sentence with “If … and upon …” mean?
What did we know about the Kessel run before the prequels?
Proper way to express "He disappeared them"
INSERT to a table from a database to other (same SQL Server) using Dynamic SQL
Why is the US ranked as #45 in Press Freedom ratings, despite its extremely permissive free speech laws?
Why this way of making earth uninhabitable in Interstellar?
Can we say or write : "No, it'sn't"?
Chain wire methods together in Lightning Web Components
Unclear about dynamic binding
Flying from Cape Town to England and return to another province
Does increasing your ability score affect your main stat?
Does soap repel water?
Domestic-to-international connection at Orlando (MCO)
Is it okay to majorly distort historical facts while writing a fiction story?
The exact meaning of 'Mom made me a sandwich'
Would a completely good Muggle be able to use a wand?
No sign flipping while figuring out the emf of voltaic cell?
Is it ever safe to open a suspicious HTML file (e.g. email attachment)?
Is wanting to ask what to write an indication that you need to change your story?
Method for adding error messages to a dictionary given a key
Is there a difference between "Fahrstuhl" and "Aufzug"
Why do remote US companies require working in the US?
Should I tutor a student who I know has cheated on their homework?
Why did CATV standarize in 75 ohms and everyone else in 50?
Tactics for judging if a printed image will be bright enough?
What do “high sea” and “carry” mean in this sentence?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat does “fat and flat range” mean in this context?Difference between “Carry on” and “Carry on with”The difference between 'beneath the sea' and 'under the sea'What does the high point meanWhat does 'high temple' mean?What does “do sea on classes” mean?What does mean this sentenceWhat does “hype high on java” mean?What is mean “cover grammar”What does this sentence with “If … and upon …” mean?
This is a line from Google's definition of "poop":
(of a wave) break over the stern of (a ship), sometimes causing it to capsize.
"carrying a high sea, we were badly pooped"
This line doesn't make sense to me. What do "high" sea and "carry" mean here? "High sea" doesn't seem to refer to the high seas. The verbal usage of "poop" here comes from the noun "poop" (in nautical terms refers to the raised area at the rear of a ship).
meaning phrase-meaning technical
add a comment |
This is a line from Google's definition of "poop":
(of a wave) break over the stern of (a ship), sometimes causing it to capsize.
"carrying a high sea, we were badly pooped"
This line doesn't make sense to me. What do "high" sea and "carry" mean here? "High sea" doesn't seem to refer to the high seas. The verbal usage of "poop" here comes from the noun "poop" (in nautical terms refers to the raised area at the rear of a ship).
meaning phrase-meaning technical
There are a lot of meanings of “poop”. This one seems to be a nautical term. Is this the meaning you were looking for? As someone who is not familiar with nautical terminology I am not sure what “carrying a high sea” means in this context, either.
– Mixolydian
2 days ago
@Mixolydian Good call pointing that out. I am adding the definition to the question.
– Eddie Kal
2 days ago
add a comment |
This is a line from Google's definition of "poop":
(of a wave) break over the stern of (a ship), sometimes causing it to capsize.
"carrying a high sea, we were badly pooped"
This line doesn't make sense to me. What do "high" sea and "carry" mean here? "High sea" doesn't seem to refer to the high seas. The verbal usage of "poop" here comes from the noun "poop" (in nautical terms refers to the raised area at the rear of a ship).
meaning phrase-meaning technical
This is a line from Google's definition of "poop":
(of a wave) break over the stern of (a ship), sometimes causing it to capsize.
"carrying a high sea, we were badly pooped"
This line doesn't make sense to me. What do "high" sea and "carry" mean here? "High sea" doesn't seem to refer to the high seas. The verbal usage of "poop" here comes from the noun "poop" (in nautical terms refers to the raised area at the rear of a ship).
meaning phrase-meaning technical
meaning phrase-meaning technical
edited yesterday
Eddie Kal
asked 2 days ago
Eddie KalEddie Kal
8,07262866
8,07262866
There are a lot of meanings of “poop”. This one seems to be a nautical term. Is this the meaning you were looking for? As someone who is not familiar with nautical terminology I am not sure what “carrying a high sea” means in this context, either.
– Mixolydian
2 days ago
@Mixolydian Good call pointing that out. I am adding the definition to the question.
– Eddie Kal
2 days ago
add a comment |
There are a lot of meanings of “poop”. This one seems to be a nautical term. Is this the meaning you were looking for? As someone who is not familiar with nautical terminology I am not sure what “carrying a high sea” means in this context, either.
– Mixolydian
2 days ago
@Mixolydian Good call pointing that out. I am adding the definition to the question.
– Eddie Kal
2 days ago
There are a lot of meanings of “poop”. This one seems to be a nautical term. Is this the meaning you were looking for? As someone who is not familiar with nautical terminology I am not sure what “carrying a high sea” means in this context, either.
– Mixolydian
2 days ago
There are a lot of meanings of “poop”. This one seems to be a nautical term. Is this the meaning you were looking for? As someone who is not familiar with nautical terminology I am not sure what “carrying a high sea” means in this context, either.
– Mixolydian
2 days ago
@Mixolydian Good call pointing that out. I am adding the definition to the question.
– Eddie Kal
2 days ago
@Mixolydian Good call pointing that out. I am adding the definition to the question.
– Eddie Kal
2 days ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
There's a lot of specialist nautical terminology here. I'm not an expert on this, but I've done a bit of checking with people who know more, and I'm reasonably confident.
For a sailing ship to be carrying an environmental condition - sea state, weather, etc - is a term I'm not terribly familiar with, but I gather it just means to be experiencing that condition.
A high sea is referring to the sea state, how rough the sea is.
Being badly pooped is to have a lot of water breaking over the poop deck, or the rearmost, elevated deck on a sailing ship. Even relatively small sailing ships would have this, even if they have no real forecastle to speak of, because it shields the quarterdeck in front of it, where the helmsman (or coxswain) and captain (if they aren't the same person) are, directing the ship.
Now, I tried to find where the dictionaries online might have gotten this quote, and discovered that they missed out a bit of the middle of it that might make it slightly easier to understand, though it's still obscure to the layman:
"As it grew dark I drew away, and headed up for Plymouth. Off Rame Head, carrying a high sea on the quarter, we were badly pooped" (source: Lonely Road By Nevil Shute)
That makes it more clear what carrying a high sea is meant to mean; on the quarter refers to a direction, between abeam (to one side) and astern. Thus the sea state, the high sea, is being driven from a diagonal direction to one side of and behind the ship. Because of that, there was a lot of water breaking onto the poop deck.
2
In this context, I think carrying is roughly synonymous with weathering or surviving. I doubt you could carry a placid sea, for example.
– Kevin
yesterday
9
@SamBC has it right. I am a master mariner & his interpretation is correct. Every profession has its specialist terminology. To Carry a Sea on the quarter means the sea is coming from either 4:30 or 7:30. To poop badly means that a wave has broken over the stern and there is A LOT of green water on deck. This can be a very dangerous state as the vessel's buoyancy aft is significantly reduced and can lead to a broach where the vessel lies beam-on (across) to the sea and is in danger of being rolled.
– pHred
yesterday
@pHred what did you mean by “green water”? Why is it green?
– Andrew Tobilko
yesterday
4
"Green water" basically means a significant quantity of seawater, as opposed to just getting sprayed with foam from the tip of the wave (which would be white in appearance).
– dwizum
yesterday
I've also heard the expression "solid green water", which I just take to mean "yup, definitely green".
– SamBC
yesterday
|
show 5 more comments
When we say a ship is 'carrying a high sea" we mean that the sea in which it is sailing is very rough, with waves that are large enough to poop the ship (verb, meaning to break over the stern of the ship causing it to capsize, or nearly do so).
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "481"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f202885%2fwhat-do-high-sea-and-carry-mean-in-this-sentence%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There's a lot of specialist nautical terminology here. I'm not an expert on this, but I've done a bit of checking with people who know more, and I'm reasonably confident.
For a sailing ship to be carrying an environmental condition - sea state, weather, etc - is a term I'm not terribly familiar with, but I gather it just means to be experiencing that condition.
A high sea is referring to the sea state, how rough the sea is.
Being badly pooped is to have a lot of water breaking over the poop deck, or the rearmost, elevated deck on a sailing ship. Even relatively small sailing ships would have this, even if they have no real forecastle to speak of, because it shields the quarterdeck in front of it, where the helmsman (or coxswain) and captain (if they aren't the same person) are, directing the ship.
Now, I tried to find where the dictionaries online might have gotten this quote, and discovered that they missed out a bit of the middle of it that might make it slightly easier to understand, though it's still obscure to the layman:
"As it grew dark I drew away, and headed up for Plymouth. Off Rame Head, carrying a high sea on the quarter, we were badly pooped" (source: Lonely Road By Nevil Shute)
That makes it more clear what carrying a high sea is meant to mean; on the quarter refers to a direction, between abeam (to one side) and astern. Thus the sea state, the high sea, is being driven from a diagonal direction to one side of and behind the ship. Because of that, there was a lot of water breaking onto the poop deck.
2
In this context, I think carrying is roughly synonymous with weathering or surviving. I doubt you could carry a placid sea, for example.
– Kevin
yesterday
9
@SamBC has it right. I am a master mariner & his interpretation is correct. Every profession has its specialist terminology. To Carry a Sea on the quarter means the sea is coming from either 4:30 or 7:30. To poop badly means that a wave has broken over the stern and there is A LOT of green water on deck. This can be a very dangerous state as the vessel's buoyancy aft is significantly reduced and can lead to a broach where the vessel lies beam-on (across) to the sea and is in danger of being rolled.
– pHred
yesterday
@pHred what did you mean by “green water”? Why is it green?
– Andrew Tobilko
yesterday
4
"Green water" basically means a significant quantity of seawater, as opposed to just getting sprayed with foam from the tip of the wave (which would be white in appearance).
– dwizum
yesterday
I've also heard the expression "solid green water", which I just take to mean "yup, definitely green".
– SamBC
yesterday
|
show 5 more comments
There's a lot of specialist nautical terminology here. I'm not an expert on this, but I've done a bit of checking with people who know more, and I'm reasonably confident.
For a sailing ship to be carrying an environmental condition - sea state, weather, etc - is a term I'm not terribly familiar with, but I gather it just means to be experiencing that condition.
A high sea is referring to the sea state, how rough the sea is.
Being badly pooped is to have a lot of water breaking over the poop deck, or the rearmost, elevated deck on a sailing ship. Even relatively small sailing ships would have this, even if they have no real forecastle to speak of, because it shields the quarterdeck in front of it, where the helmsman (or coxswain) and captain (if they aren't the same person) are, directing the ship.
Now, I tried to find where the dictionaries online might have gotten this quote, and discovered that they missed out a bit of the middle of it that might make it slightly easier to understand, though it's still obscure to the layman:
"As it grew dark I drew away, and headed up for Plymouth. Off Rame Head, carrying a high sea on the quarter, we were badly pooped" (source: Lonely Road By Nevil Shute)
That makes it more clear what carrying a high sea is meant to mean; on the quarter refers to a direction, between abeam (to one side) and astern. Thus the sea state, the high sea, is being driven from a diagonal direction to one side of and behind the ship. Because of that, there was a lot of water breaking onto the poop deck.
2
In this context, I think carrying is roughly synonymous with weathering or surviving. I doubt you could carry a placid sea, for example.
– Kevin
yesterday
9
@SamBC has it right. I am a master mariner & his interpretation is correct. Every profession has its specialist terminology. To Carry a Sea on the quarter means the sea is coming from either 4:30 or 7:30. To poop badly means that a wave has broken over the stern and there is A LOT of green water on deck. This can be a very dangerous state as the vessel's buoyancy aft is significantly reduced and can lead to a broach where the vessel lies beam-on (across) to the sea and is in danger of being rolled.
– pHred
yesterday
@pHred what did you mean by “green water”? Why is it green?
– Andrew Tobilko
yesterday
4
"Green water" basically means a significant quantity of seawater, as opposed to just getting sprayed with foam from the tip of the wave (which would be white in appearance).
– dwizum
yesterday
I've also heard the expression "solid green water", which I just take to mean "yup, definitely green".
– SamBC
yesterday
|
show 5 more comments
There's a lot of specialist nautical terminology here. I'm not an expert on this, but I've done a bit of checking with people who know more, and I'm reasonably confident.
For a sailing ship to be carrying an environmental condition - sea state, weather, etc - is a term I'm not terribly familiar with, but I gather it just means to be experiencing that condition.
A high sea is referring to the sea state, how rough the sea is.
Being badly pooped is to have a lot of water breaking over the poop deck, or the rearmost, elevated deck on a sailing ship. Even relatively small sailing ships would have this, even if they have no real forecastle to speak of, because it shields the quarterdeck in front of it, where the helmsman (or coxswain) and captain (if they aren't the same person) are, directing the ship.
Now, I tried to find where the dictionaries online might have gotten this quote, and discovered that they missed out a bit of the middle of it that might make it slightly easier to understand, though it's still obscure to the layman:
"As it grew dark I drew away, and headed up for Plymouth. Off Rame Head, carrying a high sea on the quarter, we were badly pooped" (source: Lonely Road By Nevil Shute)
That makes it more clear what carrying a high sea is meant to mean; on the quarter refers to a direction, between abeam (to one side) and astern. Thus the sea state, the high sea, is being driven from a diagonal direction to one side of and behind the ship. Because of that, there was a lot of water breaking onto the poop deck.
There's a lot of specialist nautical terminology here. I'm not an expert on this, but I've done a bit of checking with people who know more, and I'm reasonably confident.
For a sailing ship to be carrying an environmental condition - sea state, weather, etc - is a term I'm not terribly familiar with, but I gather it just means to be experiencing that condition.
A high sea is referring to the sea state, how rough the sea is.
Being badly pooped is to have a lot of water breaking over the poop deck, or the rearmost, elevated deck on a sailing ship. Even relatively small sailing ships would have this, even if they have no real forecastle to speak of, because it shields the quarterdeck in front of it, where the helmsman (or coxswain) and captain (if they aren't the same person) are, directing the ship.
Now, I tried to find where the dictionaries online might have gotten this quote, and discovered that they missed out a bit of the middle of it that might make it slightly easier to understand, though it's still obscure to the layman:
"As it grew dark I drew away, and headed up for Plymouth. Off Rame Head, carrying a high sea on the quarter, we were badly pooped" (source: Lonely Road By Nevil Shute)
That makes it more clear what carrying a high sea is meant to mean; on the quarter refers to a direction, between abeam (to one side) and astern. Thus the sea state, the high sea, is being driven from a diagonal direction to one side of and behind the ship. Because of that, there was a lot of water breaking onto the poop deck.
edited yesterday
answered 2 days ago
SamBCSamBC
15.8k2161
15.8k2161
2
In this context, I think carrying is roughly synonymous with weathering or surviving. I doubt you could carry a placid sea, for example.
– Kevin
yesterday
9
@SamBC has it right. I am a master mariner & his interpretation is correct. Every profession has its specialist terminology. To Carry a Sea on the quarter means the sea is coming from either 4:30 or 7:30. To poop badly means that a wave has broken over the stern and there is A LOT of green water on deck. This can be a very dangerous state as the vessel's buoyancy aft is significantly reduced and can lead to a broach where the vessel lies beam-on (across) to the sea and is in danger of being rolled.
– pHred
yesterday
@pHred what did you mean by “green water”? Why is it green?
– Andrew Tobilko
yesterday
4
"Green water" basically means a significant quantity of seawater, as opposed to just getting sprayed with foam from the tip of the wave (which would be white in appearance).
– dwizum
yesterday
I've also heard the expression "solid green water", which I just take to mean "yup, definitely green".
– SamBC
yesterday
|
show 5 more comments
2
In this context, I think carrying is roughly synonymous with weathering or surviving. I doubt you could carry a placid sea, for example.
– Kevin
yesterday
9
@SamBC has it right. I am a master mariner & his interpretation is correct. Every profession has its specialist terminology. To Carry a Sea on the quarter means the sea is coming from either 4:30 or 7:30. To poop badly means that a wave has broken over the stern and there is A LOT of green water on deck. This can be a very dangerous state as the vessel's buoyancy aft is significantly reduced and can lead to a broach where the vessel lies beam-on (across) to the sea and is in danger of being rolled.
– pHred
yesterday
@pHred what did you mean by “green water”? Why is it green?
– Andrew Tobilko
yesterday
4
"Green water" basically means a significant quantity of seawater, as opposed to just getting sprayed with foam from the tip of the wave (which would be white in appearance).
– dwizum
yesterday
I've also heard the expression "solid green water", which I just take to mean "yup, definitely green".
– SamBC
yesterday
2
2
In this context, I think carrying is roughly synonymous with weathering or surviving. I doubt you could carry a placid sea, for example.
– Kevin
yesterday
In this context, I think carrying is roughly synonymous with weathering or surviving. I doubt you could carry a placid sea, for example.
– Kevin
yesterday
9
9
@SamBC has it right. I am a master mariner & his interpretation is correct. Every profession has its specialist terminology. To Carry a Sea on the quarter means the sea is coming from either 4:30 or 7:30. To poop badly means that a wave has broken over the stern and there is A LOT of green water on deck. This can be a very dangerous state as the vessel's buoyancy aft is significantly reduced and can lead to a broach where the vessel lies beam-on (across) to the sea and is in danger of being rolled.
– pHred
yesterday
@SamBC has it right. I am a master mariner & his interpretation is correct. Every profession has its specialist terminology. To Carry a Sea on the quarter means the sea is coming from either 4:30 or 7:30. To poop badly means that a wave has broken over the stern and there is A LOT of green water on deck. This can be a very dangerous state as the vessel's buoyancy aft is significantly reduced and can lead to a broach where the vessel lies beam-on (across) to the sea and is in danger of being rolled.
– pHred
yesterday
@pHred what did you mean by “green water”? Why is it green?
– Andrew Tobilko
yesterday
@pHred what did you mean by “green water”? Why is it green?
– Andrew Tobilko
yesterday
4
4
"Green water" basically means a significant quantity of seawater, as opposed to just getting sprayed with foam from the tip of the wave (which would be white in appearance).
– dwizum
yesterday
"Green water" basically means a significant quantity of seawater, as opposed to just getting sprayed with foam from the tip of the wave (which would be white in appearance).
– dwizum
yesterday
I've also heard the expression "solid green water", which I just take to mean "yup, definitely green".
– SamBC
yesterday
I've also heard the expression "solid green water", which I just take to mean "yup, definitely green".
– SamBC
yesterday
|
show 5 more comments
When we say a ship is 'carrying a high sea" we mean that the sea in which it is sailing is very rough, with waves that are large enough to poop the ship (verb, meaning to break over the stern of the ship causing it to capsize, or nearly do so).
add a comment |
When we say a ship is 'carrying a high sea" we mean that the sea in which it is sailing is very rough, with waves that are large enough to poop the ship (verb, meaning to break over the stern of the ship causing it to capsize, or nearly do so).
add a comment |
When we say a ship is 'carrying a high sea" we mean that the sea in which it is sailing is very rough, with waves that are large enough to poop the ship (verb, meaning to break over the stern of the ship causing it to capsize, or nearly do so).
When we say a ship is 'carrying a high sea" we mean that the sea in which it is sailing is very rough, with waves that are large enough to poop the ship (verb, meaning to break over the stern of the ship causing it to capsize, or nearly do so).
answered yesterday
Michael HarveyMichael Harvey
18k12341
18k12341
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language Learners Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f202885%2fwhat-do-high-sea-and-carry-mean-in-this-sentence%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
There are a lot of meanings of “poop”. This one seems to be a nautical term. Is this the meaning you were looking for? As someone who is not familiar with nautical terminology I am not sure what “carrying a high sea” means in this context, either.
– Mixolydian
2 days ago
@Mixolydian Good call pointing that out. I am adding the definition to the question.
– Eddie Kal
2 days ago