galley

listen to the pronunciation of galley
Englisch - Englisch
The cookroom or kitchen and cooking apparatus of a vessel or aircraft; sometimes on merchant vessels called the caboose
A long, slender ship propelled primarily by oars, whether having masts and sails or not; usually referring to rowed warships used in the Mediterranean from the 16th century until the modern era
An oblong oven or muffle with a battery of retorts; a gallery furnace
A proof sheet taken from type while on a galley; a galley proof
A light, open boat used on the Thames by customhouse officers, press gangs, and also for pleasure
One of the small boats carried by a man-of-war
An oblong tray of wood or brass, with upright sides, for holding type which has been set, or is to be made up, etc
{n} a vessel flat built and long, navigated with sails and oars, a ships cook room
– The kitchen of a ship
a long, narrow and low ship, with a lateen sail, provided with all the energy the number of oars could furnish (up to 180) It was first adopted in the ninth century, and for the entire modern age would remain the principal ship of the Mediterranean It was usually 50 m long, 7 m high, and the crew might total up to 500 men Galleys were named after places ('marsigliana, zarattina'), after noble families in Venice ('Trona', Marcella', 'Moceniga') or after the goods that they transported
The kitchen area on a boat
Kitchen
a large medieval vessel with a single deck propelled by sails and oars with guns at stern and prow; a complement of 1,000 men; used mainly in the Mediterranean for war and trading
Navy term for cafeteria or dining facility
On a ship or aircraft, the galley is the kitchen
The kitchen area of a boat
One of the small boats carried by a man-of- war
(classical antiquity) a crescent-shaped seagoing vessel propelled by oars
the area for food preparation on a ship the kitchen area for food preparation on an airliner (classical antiquity) a crescent-shaped seagoing vessel propelled by oars a large medieval vessel with a single deck propelled by sails and oars with guns at stern and prow; a complement of 1,000 men; used mainly in the Mediterranean for war and trading
A large vessel for war and national purposes; -- common in the Middle Ages, and down to the 17th century
the kitchen area for food preparation on an airliner
In former times, a galley was a ship with sails and a lot of oars, which was often rowed by slaves or prisoners. Large seagoing vessel propelled primarily by oars. The Egyptians, Cretans, and other ancient peoples used sail-equipped galleys for war and commerce. The Phoenicians apparently introduced the bireme ( 700 BC), which had two banks of oars staggered on either side. The Greeks first built the trireme 500 BC. War galleys would cruise in columns and would engage the enemy as a line abreast. A galley would close with the enemy at the bow, which was equipped with a ram, grappling irons, and missile-hurling devices. Invention of the lateen (fore-and-aft) sail and the stern rudder rendered the galley obsolete for commerce, but its greater maneuverability maintained its military importance into the 16th century. See also longship
A name given by analogy to the Greek, Roman, and other ancient vessels propelled by oars
A galley is the kitchen of a ship or aircraft
The kitchen area of a motorhome
Typeset material before it has been arranged into page form to top
the area for food preparation on a ship
The pre-publication copies sent to the author for final proofreading or to reviewers for pre-publication reviews
The kitchen in a ship
Ship's kitchen
the writer's proof of a the book before it is sold commercially This is what the reviewer reads
The cookroom or kitchen and cooking apparatus of a vessel or aircraft; -- sometimes on merchant vessels called the caboose
(old) flat oblong tray into which composed type matter is put and kept until made up into pages in the forme Also a similar tray on a slug composing machine which receives the slugs as they are ejected Also a long column of composed text matter
The kitchen on a boat
Ship used in war, as opposed to a merchant ship In a galley, storage room inside is sacrificed for speed
1 Unaltered phototypesetter output, usually single columns of type on photographic paper, serving as preliminary proofs 2 Final image or typeset copy output directly to film or photographic paper 3 Initially, a long, shallow tray for storing and proofing handset type
A typeset draft used for proofreading copy and estimating text length, sometimes sent to book reviewers
-A type of kitchen in which the appliances and cabinetry are lined up against a single wall
A sheet containing a proof of unpaginated type composition
Vessel's kitchen
The space on a boat that would be referred to as the kitchen
{i} type of ship propelled mainly by oars; ship's kitchen; tray to hold type that has been set (Printing); galley proof
The cookroom or kitchen and cooking apparatus of a vessel; sometimes on merchant vessels called the caboose
A proof of a book made before the pages are numbered
A vessel propelled by oars, whether having masts and sails or not A large vessel for war and national purposes; common in the Middle Ages, and down to the 17th century
A vessel propelled by oars, whether having masts and sails or not
1 A nautical kitchen; 2 A large medival ship of shallow draft propelled by sails and oars, used as a merchantman or warship in the Mediterranean; 3 An ancient seagoing vessel propelled with double or triple banks of oars
a long, narrow and low ship, with a Latin sail, provided with all the energy the number of oars could furnish (up to 180) It was first adopted in the ninth century, and for the entire modern age would remain the principal ship of the Mediterranean It was usually 50 m long, 7 m high, and the crew might total up to 500 men Galleys were named after places ('marsigliana, zarattina'), after noble families in Venice ('Trona', Marcella', 'Moceniga') or after the goods that they transported
galley proof
A trial page or proof of continuous text that has not been divided into pages
galley slave
A slave who rows in a galley
galley slaves
plural form of galley slave
galley proof
A proof that is dose enough to final copy to permit proof reading The traditional galley was a small unit of manually set type, which was checked before being merged into a frame with other galleys The galley proof also called a reader's proof-was used to check for errors in manual typesetting
galley proof
A proof taken from composed type before page composition to allow for the detection and correction of errors
galley proof
a proof taken before the type is broken up to print pages
galley proof
A copy of a book that was produced ostensibly for proof readers In times past, these were produced in very small numbers within the publishing house itself, on a small press called a galley The product of the galley tended to be long, narrow sheets These sheets, also called galleys, were crudely bound up for in house use The galley presses are mostly gone, but the name survives The distinction between proofs (galley or other), and ARC's and review copies is quite blured In some cases a single issue is referred to as all of the foregoing
galley proof
a proof of text copy only, before it is made into pages with other art elements
galley proof
Text copy before it is put into a mechanical layout or desktop layout
galley proof
proof printed from type set in a galley (long narrow tray)
galley proof
Proof of typeset material in galley form prior to page makeup to top
galley proof
A typeset copy of an ad or editorial material, before it is made into pages for final production
galley proof
A proof of text copy before it is pasted into position for printing
galley proof
A printout of text used for proofreading before final page assembly
galley proof
Êa proof of text copy only, before it is made into pages with other art elements
galley proof
copy of text for checking before it is finally assembled for print run
galley proof
A proof taken of type standing in a galley, before it is made up into pages
galley proof
Proof of type from any Source, whether metal type or photo type Also called checker and slip proof
galley proof
A proof of text copy before it is formatted for the page
galley slave
slave forced to operate an oar on a galley, slave who rows on a galley (ancient sailing vessel propelled by oars and sails)
galley slave
a slave condemned to row in a galley
galley worm
centipede
galleys
Long pages of typeset text, not yet broken out into book pages, not much used today
galleys
plural of galley
galleys
the long metal trays used to hold type after it has been set and before the press run
galleys
A publisher's initial typeset version of an author's manuscript, usually after final editing but prior to pagination for the final version Authors are generally given an opportunity to review galleys for errors or significant changes How much may be changed is often spelled out in contracts
galleys
  The initial typeset form of a manuscript, sent to an author for review   Page divisions are not made, but type size and column format are set
knock galley west
{f} hit senseless
galley
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