The Major Operations of the Navies in the War of American Independence
| Wake. | | The track left by a vessel's passage through the water. "In the wake of": directly astern of.
| | Way. | | Movement through the water. "To get underway": to pass from stand-still to movement.
| | Wear, to. | | See under "Tack."
| | Weather. | | Relative position to windward of another object. Opposite to Lee. Weather side, lee side, of a vessel; weather fleet, lee fleet; weather gage, lee gage (see "Gage"); weather shore, lee shore.
| | Weather, to. | | To pass to windward of a vessel, or of any other object.
| | Weatherly. | | The quality of a vessel which favors her getting, or keeping, to windward.
| | Weigh, to. | | To raise the anchor from the bottom. Used alone; e.g., "the fleet weighed."
| | Wheel. | | So called from its form. The mechanical appliance, a wheel, with several handles for turning it, by which power is increased, and also transmitted from the steersman on deck to the tiller below, in order to steer the vessel.
| | Wind and Water, between. | | That part of a vessel's side which comes out of water when she inclines to a strong side wind, but otherwise is under water.
| | Windward. | | Direction from which the wind blows.
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| | Yard. | | See "Spars."
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