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Clams Canino wrote:
Binicle, Binacle, ??? I know it ain't barnacle. -W The modern spelling is binnacle. Binnacle: a box on the deck of a ship near the helm, in which the compass is placed. 1622 Recov. Ship Bristol in Arb. Garner IV. 584 Watch the biticle, attend the compass. 1627 Capt. Smith Seaman's Gram. ii. 11 A square box nailed together with woodden pinnes, called a Bittacle,+and in it alwaies stands the Compasse. 1684 I. Mather Remark. Provid. (1856) 65 The compass in the biddikil. 1762 Falconer Shipwr. ii. 458 Companion, binnacle, in floating wreck, With compasses and glasses strew'd the deck. [1769 I Dict. Marine (1789) F2 This is called bittacle in all the old sea-books.] 1836 Marryat Midsh. Easy xiii, Then they went aft to the binnacle again. 1839 I Phant. Ship xli, The+shrine of the saint at the bittacle. 1870 R. Ferguson Electr. 24 To place pieces of soft iron or magnets in the immediate neighbourhood of the binnacle. b. attrib. 1834 H. Miller Scenes & Leg. xxviii. (1857) 422 In inventing binnacle lamps. 1856 Olmsted Slave States 142 The binnacle-compass was a sort of fetish to him. From the OED, Second Edition. -- Email sent to is never read. |
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