Keel - Wikipedia The keel runs along the centerline of the ship, from the bow to the stern The keel is often the first part of a ship's hull to be constructed, and laying the keel, or placing the keel in the cradle where the ship will be built, may mark the start time of its construction
KEEL Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com The keel of a boat is the beam that runs the length of the hull — the body of the boat — and can extend vertically into the water to provide stability A keel doesn't just refer to the stabilization of boats
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Keel | Hull Structure, Shipbuilding Design | Britannica keel, in shipbuilding, the main structural member and backbone of a ship or boat, running longitudinally along the centre of the bottom of the hull from stem to stern
Keel - definition of keel by The Free Dictionary keel 1 (kil) n 1 a central fore-and-aft structural member in the bottom of a ship's hull extending from the stem to the sternpost 2 a ship; boat 3 a part corresponding to a ship's keel in some other structure, as in a dirigible balloon
A. Word. A. Day --keel - wordsmith. org The keel is the bottom-most (bottomest!) part of a boat or ship So, if it’s up, well, things are not looking good This led to the idiom “to keel over” (often dramatically, like a sailor who’s had one too many) But if things are on “an even keel”, congratulations! You’re sailing smoothly