barricade (n)The ship quivered as if rent asunder, but her stout oaken beams heaved aside the floes with sovereign contempt. When she struck the ice full tilt, water flew higher than the barricade rail.PRINTED ITEM DNE-citW. J. KIRWIN MAY 1975JH MAY 1975Used I and SupUsed IUsed IOnly last sentence of quote is used in DNE I
barricados240 It was good to get out in punt in the spring of the year and to row around among th...
strike vThough last to leave the Harbour she was first to strike the patch, / And by the twenty...
quinter vKilling scattered seals while the ship is moving through loose ice, the going over the sid...
barricade (v). . . the shore was barricaded with ice, seven feet thick . . .PRINTED ITEM DNE-citW...
breaker n"Well,"I said,"I made Little Bay Islands," I said," that night, an' "I said" I also made ...
barricade (n)1909 GRENFELL 5 ... I was obliged to keep on what we call the "ballicaters," or ice b...
raft 1 vThey seemed to be on the verge of success, then the ice buckled and began to raft. Huge ...
bridge nI did but just get them in time, as a bridge of ice then broke loose, which would have car...
butt vIs backing off and running the ship at ice in order to force or head a way through it.See ci...
nip vThe ice will nip and sink a ship as easily as a nutcracker smashes a walnut, if pressures de...
island nThose Ilands of Ice are not dangerous unto Ships being once descried, as by their whitenes...
barricade nBy this time the waves were breaking over our barrack head and the deck of the _Polly_ ...
bridge nBy bending close to the ice we could follow their track. The bridge wound. Sometimes we ...
stabber n"If dis un get froze in yere, solid, de divil himself couldn't get us out. We might bide a...
barricado. . . ice piled on the shoreice piled on the shorePRINTED ITEMG. M. Story MAY 1970JH ...
barricados240 It was good to get out in punt in the spring of the year and to row around among th...
strike vThough last to leave the Harbour she was first to strike the patch, / And by the twenty...
quinter vKilling scattered seals while the ship is moving through loose ice, the going over the sid...
barricade (v). . . the shore was barricaded with ice, seven feet thick . . .PRINTED ITEM DNE-citW...
breaker n"Well,"I said,"I made Little Bay Islands," I said," that night, an' "I said" I also made ...
barricade (n)1909 GRENFELL 5 ... I was obliged to keep on what we call the "ballicaters," or ice b...
raft 1 vThey seemed to be on the verge of success, then the ice buckled and began to raft. Huge ...
bridge nI did but just get them in time, as a bridge of ice then broke loose, which would have car...
butt vIs backing off and running the ship at ice in order to force or head a way through it.See ci...
nip vThe ice will nip and sink a ship as easily as a nutcracker smashes a walnut, if pressures de...
island nThose Ilands of Ice are not dangerous unto Ships being once descried, as by their whitenes...
barricade nBy this time the waves were breaking over our barrack head and the deck of the _Polly_ ...
bridge nBy bending close to the ice we could follow their track. The bridge wound. Sometimes we ...
stabber n"If dis un get froze in yere, solid, de divil himself couldn't get us out. We might bide a...
barricado. . . ice piled on the shoreice piled on the shorePRINTED ITEMG. M. Story MAY 1970JH ...
barricados240 It was good to get out in punt in the spring of the year and to row around among th...
strike vThough last to leave the Harbour she was first to strike the patch, / And by the twenty...
quinter vKilling scattered seals while the ship is moving through loose ice, the going over the sid...