How To Use Galleon In A Sentence

  • The designers designed a terrific pirate galleon and a thrilling Lost Boys' hideout.
  • The galleon was a long slender ship of extremely low freeboard, rakish rigged as a single-master, both sails and oars being used as The Stamps of Canada
  • So many ships have foundered along this coast, driven onto its reefs by storms or lured there by wreckers ' lights, that pieces from Spanish galleons still wash up with the tide.
  • Sarah -' She came down the hallway, a galleon of a woman beside the very slim Gail Lee. YESTERDAY'S SHADOW
  • If diving for wrecks turns you on, Bermuda is a veritable treasure trove of maritime disaster, with a wreck collection including 16th century Spanish galleons, warships and a luxury transatlantic liner.
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  • Then a tram to work; he enjoyed a tram ride, especially if he went on the top to sit on the prow as on a galleon. COFFIN ON THE WATER
  • High above, sheets of material hang like sails on a becalmed Spanish galleon.
  • A galleon with its upper decks razed, perhaps, in an effort to make it lighter, and furthermore cursed with an eccentric sailmaker.
  • Ships of War, "round" and "long"; trireme; penteconter; liburna; galley; dromon; galleas; junk; Viking craft; galleon; two and three-deckers; steam; submarine; destroyer; battle cruiser; dreadnought A History of Sea Power
  • The last time I visited Strathbeg, I counted eighty elegant swans, floating galleon-like on calm waters.
  • With him came fleet of 23 caravels, galleons and war barks.
  • I thought they had come to attack us, but they were a _caffila_ of merchantmen bound for Cambaya; as there comes every year a similar fleet from Goa, Chaul, and other places to the southwards, for Cambaya, whence they bring the greatest part of the loading which is carried by the caracks and galleons to Portugal. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 09 Arranged in Systematic Order: Forming a Complete History of the Origin and Progress of Navigation, Discovery, and Commerce, by Sea and Land, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time
  • Most of the damage was to the older ships, from galleys to galleons and frigates to pre-dreadnaught steamers.
  • The fleet of 130 ships - including 22 fighting galleons - sailed in a crescent shape.
  • The moon a ghostly galleon tossed upon the cloudy seas?
  • Spanish and Portuguese colonies stretched across south, central, and southern North America while Spain's galleons crossed the Pacific to the Philippines.
  • The fleet of 130 ships - including 22 fighting galleons - sailed in a crescent shape.
  • The Spanish islands and their natural harbors became vital hubs of shipping and trade for the galleons that carried the wealth of the new world to Europe.
  • A year later, secure in the north, Gloriana's licensed pirates in their gun-crammed galleons, aided by a storm, saw off the Spanish Armada.
  • The former was usually called the galeones (_anglice_ "galleons"), was commanded by a "general," and sailed from Spain earlier in the year, between January and March. The Buccaneers in the West Indies in the XVII Century
  • Here, less than two decades after Drake, Sebastien Carmenon piled up on the rocks with a silk-laden galleon from the Philippines. Four Horses and a Sailor
  • Also the dollars with which they annually purchased cargoes from the Chinese for the galleons came from Mexico. The Philippine Islands
  • From gold-laden galleons to a fully rigged tea-clipper, there are wrecks galore in the clear waters around Salcombe.
  • Santa Rosa - The Rich Mountain - was first mined for a colonial interest in its silver - most of which ballasted galleons sailed back to Spain.
  • Again, that's great stuff for kids - it's pirates, it's pistols, it's cutlasses, it's galleons and sloops and swords.
  • The galleons, tea cutters and strange craft that ought to form in my mind's eye are off sailing other waters, and if there are angels up there then their sketching pencils draw nothing but idle lines in the sky.
  • After ballasting his ship with silver from the rich Potosi mines, and rifling even the churches, he hastened onward in pursuit of a richly laden galleon nicknamed _Cacafuego_ -- a name discreetly translated _Spitfire_, but which, to repeat a joke that greatly amused Drake's men at the time, it was proposed to change to _Spitsilver_, for when overtaken and captured the vessel yielded 26 tons of silver, 13 chests of pieces of eight, and gold and jewels sufficient to swell the booty to half a million pounds sterling. A History of Sea Power
  • The battle was fought, and the flagship of Olanda was sunk, and two galleons burned, while the almiranta, with two others, took to flight. The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 27 of 55 1636-37 Explorations by Early Navigators, Descriptions of the Islands and Their Peoples, Their History and Records of the Catholic Missions, as Related in Contemporaneous Books and Manuscripts, Showing t
  • The first bearer of the name Reynolds came to our shores with the Spanish Armada and the galleon on which he travelled was wrecked on the North coast of Sligo.
  • Juan Bautista de Molina; of "San Lorenço," Captain Azevedo; and command of the galleon "San Marcos" -- which was called the almiranta, as it had been with Don Juan de Silva in the expedition which he made to The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 19 of 55 1620-1621 Explorations by early navigators, descriptions of the islands and their peoples, their history and records of the catholic missions, as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts, showing
  • There was even a galleon lurking near the mouth of the harbour, ostensibly harmless.
  • In 1565 a Spanish galleon laden with cinnamon sailed from Manila to Mexico, finally linking up Spain's American colonies with the markets of south-east Asia.
  • Besides, these Kirkland galleons are pretty tough for civvy ships.
  • Because the thematic is so close -- or belongs so well -- to the topic area of my mapping and taxonomy blog, atlast (t), the new galleon trade blog is a child of atlast (t) called atlast (t): The Galleon Trade Edition. SeeLight:
  • It shows a kite morphing into a ship that sails from a river to the sea and changes into a magnificent galleon, then back into a kite.
  • The barge thudded against the razee galleon's tumblehome near the stern.
  • NEW YORK Reuters - A U.S. government request that Galleon Group hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam spend as much as 24-1/2 years in prison -- a term associated more with murder than financial crimes -- raises the ante in the biggest individual insider trading case in a generation. Reuters: Top News
  • Anyway, now I have to wear shoes in the house, because I've already impaled my feet on tiny cutlasses, slipped on miniature cannon balls and "scuttled" a couple of galleons by not watching out where I was walking. Archive 2007-12-01
  • In galleries, the galleon is installed against a painted map of the Tomales Bay excursion, early-modernified to look like an explorer's map, and showing the triangular route of the afternoon's trip, referring to the triangular routes of Manila galleons between San Francisco, the Philippines and Mexico. Spam/maps
  • ‘The frigate and the pinnaces might be able to outmaneuver us,’ Brenner said, ‘but not the galleon.’
  • The galleon yawed, gouts of flame pouring from her perforated hull.
  • Secondly, the Catholic missionaries came to Fujian along the sea route for Great Galleon Trade, expanding the religious-cultural exchange between both sides.
  • Without hesitating La Buse sailed straight in, fired a broadside at the galleon, then boarded it, almost without resistance.
  • Don Francisco Colombo, who with an armada of twenty galleons sailed in January 1599 to protect Porto Rico from the English. The Founder of New France : A chronicle of Champlain
  • These people were allowed to trade with the galleons in exchange for welcoming fourteen Franciscan missionaries on their land.
  • She advanced towards us like a galleon in full sail.
  • Resting on the bottom or in the sediment are wrecks, such as an oil freighter and a Spanish galleon.
  • Jurors squabbled over bathroom breaks and created nicknames for players in the Galleon trial, but never wavered from their belief that Raj Rajaratnam was guilty of insider trading. What's News—
  • Again, that's great stuff for kids - it's pirates, it's pistols, it's cutlasses, it's galleons and sloops and swords.
  • Finding the funding to get the plan off the ground was the most daunting task, but once launched, the Leeds International Film Festival sailed forth like a stately galleon.
  • The galleon Cormorant breasted through gray waves beneath a gray sky. GuildWars Edge of Destiny
  • A massive galleon sailed on the waves far above my piscine semblance. Brush of Darkness
  • Sebastien Carmenon piled up on the rocks with a silk-laden galleon from the Philippines. FOUR HORSES AND A SAILOR
  • By mid-century, Spanish galleons loaded with treasure sailed annually for Europe, becoming prey to pirates, many of them English, based in the Bahamas.
  • The modern connotation of "galleon" comes partly from the Armada, and partly from a later era, the 17th century, when a galleon was the Spanish equivalent of an Indiaman. Archaic terminology in historical fiction
  • Word in port is that the galleon El Trinidad, fresh from New Spain, is awaiting repairs in a nearby harbor. Pirate Latitudes by Michael Crichton: Book summary
  • One of the big galleons--Derec recognized the Sea Troll--had storm damage: one topmast was gone.
  • Take a trip on an authentic Spanish galleon to the famous Papagayo beach.
  • Sept. 9 Bloomberg -- Galleon Group LLC co-founder Raj Rajaratnam argued against the government's request for what he called a "grotesquely severe" punishment for his insider- trading convictions. BusinessWeek.com -- Top News
  • Her twin masts come from the forests of Austria and she is ballasted with lead rather than the great stones used by the Spaniards in their galleons.
  • Drake, Sebastien Carmenon piled up on the rocks with a silk-laden galleon from the Philippines. Four Horses and a Sailor
  • The galleon was the _Mary of the Tower_, and she had a frightful list to starboard. Widdershins
  • He deconstructed the defendant's trading in stock after stock, trying to debunk what he called the "flawed notion" that the Galleon chief had relied on research and publicly available analyst reports. Galleon Prosecutors, Defense Take Their Case to Jurors
  • Ducats and doubloons, princesses and plum-cake, swords awave and cannon blazing, great galleons with crimson sails -- no wonder that they were smiling in their sleep when The Black Buccaneer
  • This picturesque town has been a haven for ships - merchantmen, naval vessels, and buccaneer galleons - since the 1600s.
  • Modern-day pirates have traded in galleons and flintlocks for high-speed motor launches and semi-automatic rifles.
  • On just day two, there was a fleet of World War One battleships from Scapa Flow, and a brace of 19th century treasure galleons from the Scilly Isles.
  • The Queen's interest in the booty that could be seized from Spanish galleons was not simply greed but necessity.
  • But if there be a fair wind off the land, there will be little rowing; the big lateen sail on her one mast will span the narrow waters between the African coast and the Balearic Isles, where a convenient look-out may be kept for Spanish galleons or perhaps an Italian polacca. The Story of the Barbary Corsairs
  • Other artists on display include Constable Michelangelo, Holbein and Rembrandt, as well as more contemporary artists; jewels rescued from a Spanish galleon of the Armada, and the last letter written by Mary.
  • A galleon with its upper decks razed, perhaps, in an effort to make it lighter, and furthermore cursed with an eccentric sailmaker.
  • Comment: about atlas (t): the galleon trade edition atlas (t): the galleon trade edition is a project of the parent blog, atlas (t): mapping, taxonomy, and you. the galleon trade edition is embedded reportage from the front lines of the 2-3-year art campaign Galleon Trade in Philippines, California, and Mexico. Galleon trade edition: bill sorro
  • There were stories of the glorious Silver Armada being lost at sea, of the galleons loaded with silver and gold for the Empire's coffers having been sunk ignominiously, and of disastrous defeats on land.
  • The two larger ships that dominated the center of the formation were clearly galleons: armed merchant ships.
  • The Model 75 galleons had standardized deck layouts, and few customers made any changes.
  • A Galleon spokesman declined to comment on the informant or the allegation that Mr. Rajaratnam dealt with the tipster.
  • And that's why you're into airships: what really turns you on is that galleon in the skies... SEIZE THE RECKLESS WIND
  • The three men went to the Bahamas, on the trail of a sunken 17th-century galleon full of treasure.
  • The galleon was another type of large ship that Champlain knew well. Champlain's Dream
  • Spine like the mast on a galleon.
  • The galleon trade provided the first opportunity for native Filipinos to leave the islands as members of the crews aboard the Spanish ships.
  • The pride of the museum's collection was a figurehead from a Florentine galleon, captured by Pirates from Danzig in 1473.
  • In their childhood he had drawn for her amusement Spanish galleons, the domes of Mogul palaces, and a fantastic damsel, that he called a bayadere, languishing on a balcony. Sacrifice
  • Next about atlas (t): the galleon trade edition atlas (t): the galleon trade edition is a project of the parent blog, atlas (t): mapping, taxonomy, and you. the galleon trade edition is embedded reportage from the front lines of the 2-3-year art campaign Galleon Trade in Philippines, California, and Mexico. Galleon trade edition
  • This picturesque town has been a haven for ships - merchantmen, naval vessels, and buccaneer galleons - since the 1600s.
  • In 1565 a Spanish galleon laden with cinnamon sailed from Manila to Mexico, finally linking up Spain's American colonies with the markets of south-east Asia.
  • Fray Diego took his passage in the galleon _San Diego_, and having arrived safely in the Viceregal Court of Mexico, he pressed his views on the Viceroy, who declared that he had no orders. The Philippine Islands
  • The golden galleon of romance set all sail for Eldorado; Cromwell was published, with its polemical preface: and the simultaneous apparition of Hernani and the too famous pourpoint of Théophile Gautier showed the opponents of the new spirit, as a contemporary remarked, that the theatre had become the veritable abomination of desolation. Introduction
  • Like a galleon in full sail, Cara hove into view.
  • In 1565 a Spanish galleon laden with cinnamon sailed from Manila to Mexico, finally linking up Spain's American colonies with the markets of south-east Asia.
  • So many ships have foundered along this coast, driven onto its reefs by storms or lured there by wreckers' lights, that pieces from Spanish galleons still wash up with the tide.
  • A blue-spotted rock codfish and a school of smaller fish swim over the sunken hull of the ill- fated Spanish merchant galleon San Diego.
  • Soon galleons were transporting wholesale quantities of the dried bugs to dyers in the great textile centers of Europe.
  • Gecko shows off a collection of amphora necks and, with the help of some local red wine, tells us tales of treasures from sunken Greek boats and Spanish galleons and about the wrecks of aircraft from World War Two.
  • Each bolt of lightning exposed a photograph of towering thunderheads - the galleons of the gods, trading broadsides in the terrific light of creation.
  • She swept past Hollis like a galleon in full sail, snapped an order then came about, bearing off on another tack. AMAGANSETT
  • Shots were fired from behind and an all out sea battle began, the sloop versus three heavily armed galleons.
  • As for the rides, well… I got soaked on the thrilling log flumes, ricked my neck on the Gauntlet - a wild loop-the-loop rollercoaster - and felt nauseous on the Galleon.
  • And in pursuit of those dreams the head of this Communist state dives in search of treasure, on two 17th century galleons that he has made his personal property.
  • The barge thudded against the razee galleon's tumblehome near the stern.
  • The ostensible plot concerns their attempts to recover a treasure trove from a galleon wrecked off the coast of Florida in the 16th century; while Twang burrows into archives in Italy, Zach hunts for clues in and around Miami.
  • At Tobermory, on the west of Scotland, a little handful of men have a strong faith that a sunken galleon from the Spanish Armada is the prison house of great treasure, and their faith is productive of an energy which makes zealous quest. Things That Matter Most: Devotional Papers
  • Like a galleon in full sail, Cara hove into view.
  • According to one legend, the ponies on this 37-mile-long barrier island are descendants of horses that survived the shipwreck of a Spanish galleon.
  • Again, that's great stuff for kids - it's pirates, it's pistols, it's cutlasses, it's galleons and sloops and swords.
  • Modern-day pirates have traded in galleons and flintlocks for high-speed motor launches and semi-automatic rifles.

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