luff

See also: Luff

English

Etymology

From Old French lof. Collins English Dictionary states that this word is ultimately derived from Middle Dutch loef.[1] Ellert Ekwall's Shakspere's Vocabulary: its etymological elements (1903) related this verb and loof instead to the East Frisian verb lofen, lufen, which would make it cognate to the French term lover.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /lʌf/
  • Rhymes: -ʌf

Noun

luff (plural luffs)

  1. (nautical) The vertical edge of a sail that is closest to the direction of the wind.
    By easing the halyard, the luff of the sail was made to sag to leeward.
  2. (nautical) The act of sailing a ship close to the wind.
  3. (nautical) The roundest part of a ship's bow.
  4. (nautical) The forward or weather leech of a sail, especially of the jib, spanker, and other fore-and-aft sails.

Translations

Verb

luff (third-person singular simple present luffs, present participle luffing, simple past and past participle luffed)

  1. (nautical, of a sail, intransitive) To shake due to being trimmed improperly.
    • 1993, John Banville, Ghosts
      I thought how my life is like a little boat and I must hold the tiller steady against the buffeting of wind and waves, and how sometimes, like this morning, I lose my hold somehow and the sail luffs helplessly and the little vessel wallows, turning this way and that in the swell.
  2. (nautical, of a boat, intransitive) To alter course to windward so that the sails luff. (Alternatively luff up)
  3. (nautical, transitive) to let out [a sail] so that it luffs.
  4. (mechanical) To alter the vertical angle of the jib of a crane so as to bring it level with the load.
    • 1999, Howard I. Shapiro, Jay P. Shapiro, Lawrence K. Shapiro, Cranes and Derricks, →ISBN, page 95:
      The tower is mounted on a slewing platform, which also carries the power plant and the counterweights, while the jib is supported and luffed by fixed pendant ropes.

Derived terms

References

  1. luff” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.