All bateaux synonyms
ba·teau
B b noun bateaux
- dinghy — any small boat designed as a tender or lifeboat, especially a small ship's boat, rowed, sailed, or driven by a motor.
- canoe — A canoe is a small, narrow boat that you move through the water using a stick with a wide end called a paddle.
- sailboat — a boat having sails as its principal means of propulsion.
- yacht — a vessel used for private cruising, racing, or other noncommercial purposes.
- craft — You can refer to a boat, a spacecraft, or an aircraft as a craft.
- barge — A barge is a long, narrow boat with a flat bottom. Barges are used for carrying heavy loads, especially on canals.
- raft — a great quantity; a lot: a raft of trouble.
- ship — a romantic relationship between fictional characters, especially one that people discuss, write about, or take an interest in, whether or not the romance actually exists in the original book, show, etc.: popular ships in fan fiction.
- catamaran — A catamaran is a sailing boat with two parallel hulls that are held in place by a single deck.
- schooner — Nautical. any of various types of sailing vessel having a foremast and mainmast, with or without other masts, and having fore-and-aft sails on all lower masts. See also ketch, topsail schooner, yawl1 (def 2).
- gondola — a long, narrow, flat-bottomed boat having a tall, ornamental stem and stern and sometimes a small cabin for passengers, rowed or poled by a single person who stands at the stern, facing forward: used especially on the canals of Venice, Italy.
- ocean liner — an oceangoing passenger ship, operating either as one unit of a regular scheduled service or as a cruise ship.
- boat — A boat is something in which people can travel across water.
- liner — something serving as a lining.
- tanker — a ship, airplane, or truck designed for bulk shipment of liquids or gases.
- bottom — The bottom of something is the lowest or deepest part of it.
- hulk — the body of an old or dismantled ship.
- launch — to set (a boat or ship) in the water.
- skiff — any of various types of boats small enough for sailing or rowing by one person.
- bucket — A bucket is a round metal or plastic container with a handle attached to its sides. Buckets are often used for holding and carrying water.
- bark — When a dog barks, it makes a short, loud noise, once or several times.
- ark — In the Bible, the ark was a large boat which Noah built in order to save his family and two of every kind of animal from the Flood.
- lifeboat — a double-ended ship's boat, constructed, mounted, and provisioned so as to be readily able to rescue and maintain persons from a sinking vessel.
- ketch — a sailing vessel rigged fore and aft on two masts, the larger, forward one being the mainmast and the after one, stepped forward of the rudderpost, being the mizzen or jigger.
- steamboat — a steam-driven vessel, especially a small one or one used on inland waters.
- dory — a boat with a narrow, flat bottom, high bow, and flaring sides.
- pinnace — a light sailing ship, especially one formerly used in attendance on a larger ship.
- scow — any of various vessels having a flat-bottomed rectangular hull with sloping ends, built in various sizes with or without means of propulsion, as barges, punts, rowboats, or sailboats.
- sloop — a single-masted, fore-and-aft-rigged sailing vessel, with or without a bowsprit, having a jib-headed or gaff mainsail, the latter sometimes with a gaff topsail, and one or more headsails. Compare cutter (def 3), knockabout (def 1).
- tub — a bathtub.
- can — You use can when you are mentioning a quality or fact about something which people may make use of if they want to.
- steamer — water in the form of an invisible gas or vapor.
- bateau — a light flat-bottomed boat used on rivers in Canada and the northern US