seaman
71seaman — /ˈsimən/ (say seemuhn) noun (plural seamen) 1. someone whose occupation it is to assist in the navigation of a ship; a sailor, specifically one below the rank of officer. 2. Navy a rating, especially one who works on deck; the lowest naval rank …
72seaman — See sailor …
73seaman — seamen semen …
74Able seaman — Seaman Sea man, n.; pl. {Seamen}. [AS. s[ae]man.] One whose occupation is to assist in the management of ships at sea; a mariner; a sailor; applied both to officers and common mariners, but especially to the latter. Opposed to {landman}, or… …
75Ordinary seaman — Seaman Sea man, n.; pl. {Seamen}. [AS. s[ae]man.] One whose occupation is to assist in the management of ships at sea; a mariner; a sailor; applied both to officers and common mariners, but especially to the latter. Opposed to {landman}, or… …
76seaman recruit — noun Date: 1947 an enlisted man of the lowest rank in the navy or coast guard …
77Seaman,Elizabeth Cochrane — Sea·man (sēʹmən), Elizabeth Cochrane. Pen name Nelly Bly (blī) 1867 1922. American journalist known for her muckraking articles in the New York World, particularly an exposé on conditions in mental institutions. She also wrote an account of her… …
78Seaman, Owen — (b. 1861) Parodist, etc. Oedipus and the Wreck (1888), Horace at Cambridge (1894), In Cap and Bells (1899), A Harvest of Chaff (1904), etc. Ed. of Punch since 1906 …
79Seaman, Sir Owen — (1861 1936) Born in London, he was educated at Shrewsbury a boys boarding school on the banks of the River Severn and overlooking the ancient townwhere he was captain. He graduated from Clare College, Cambridge, in 1883 and was successively a… …
80seaman's will — See sailor s will …