Advertisement
Advertisement
boat hook
noun
- a hook mounted at the end of a pole, used to pull or push boats toward or away from a landing, to pick up a mooring, etc.
Discover More
Word History and Origins
Origin of boat hook1
First recorded in 1605–15
Discover More
Example Sentences
The launch was already under way, and young Cargill trying to avoid it better, thrust with his boat-hook at the side of the lock.
From Project Gutenberg
Leaning then his boat-hook against a log he met in the water, David turned his boat out of the way of this perilous obstruction.
From Project Gutenberg
So saying, David disengaged his boat-hook from the entanglement of the branches of the poplar-trees.
From Project Gutenberg
Halyard's hand crept backward where a steel-shod boat-hook lay, and I also made a clutch at it.
From Project Gutenberg
Déruchette heard the sound of the boat-hook among the shingle, and the step of the man on the gunwale of the boat.
From Project Gutenberg
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse