Meaning of bluff-headed | Babel Free
Definitions
- Built with the stem nearly vertical, as opposed to one with a rake that extends far beyond the keel.
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Having a broad, precipitous front or face. broadly
- Having a rounded head with a flattish snout.
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Having a rounded tip, as opposed to a flat or pointed tip. broadly
- Having a broad face and gruff manners, especially when not exceptionally clever or assertive.
Examples
“Some are constructed with a view to carrying a large cargo, and are broad, and what is technically termed "bluff-headed," whilst others are designed for fast sailing.”
“[…] of a bluff-headed boat beating to windward in a choppy sea.”
“The vessel appears strongly constructed of seasoned white oak timber, the bow bluff-headed, while aft the poop-deck has a rise which takes in the mizzenmast and pump.”
“If one refers to af chapman one finds that while only three drawings of comparable ships show boomkins fitted, all drawings of bluff-headed ships show either an extra timberhead or a half-round cutting in the top of the hawse piece to accommodate this spar when needed.”
“Do you not see that low bluff-headed mountain?”
“Leaving behind us the town at the bottom of its deep bay, we set out to explore a bluff-headed parallelogramical promontory, bounded by Thurso Bay on the one hand, and Murkle Bay on the other, and which presents to the open sea, in the space that stretches between, an undulating line of iron-bound coast, exposed to the roll of the northern ocean.”
“In the sketch (which is taken about 75 Jovian days after that of the 2nd July) there is shown a dark copper-coloured streak along the southern margin of the south brown belt, butting on to a bluff-headed streak of cumulus cloud which may be the same remarkable bluff head noticed on July 2.”
“But now we had reached our opening ground, the boy with the pony and the second brace of dogs was ordered to the rear, with instructions to meet us by the side of a certain gray rock, and spring-head, on the northern edge of Kettletang, a huge, bluff-headed hill, overtopping all his neighbors, at noon, when we should be there to refresh the inner man, and take up the fresh dogs for the afternoon.”
“The position of the hospital is admirable, the buildings having an admirably clear outlook seaward, and standing high on the bluff-headed promontory of Bighi, which juts out into Bighi Bay, with the smaller inlet of Rinella Bay on the right, and the larger estuary of Calcara Bay, English Port, dividing the Bighi promontory from Vittoriosa and the triple-tiered fortress of St. Angelo, on the left.”
“The Alpine mastiffs resemble the dogs of Newfoundland, but are somewhat more bluff-headed.”
“The members of this subgenus may always be readily distinguished by their bluff-headed and arvicoline aspect.”
“The common Water-Vole (Arvicola amphibius) is as large as the house-rat, with which it is so often confused, but possesses of course the bluff-headed appearance and short tail characteristic of the voles.”
“All such fish are bluff-headed and taper away to the tail, and this lesson from nature was taken to heart when the later patterns of torpedoes came to be constructed.”
“The Ceylong dugong is an extraordinary and interesting animal which is often seen on the coast. It is plentiful in and about the Gulf of Manaar, and resembles somewhat a huge, thickly-made, bluff-headed seal.”
“It is said (in what may be an apocryphal story) that around 1712, a Nantucket captain named Christopher Hussey was blown offshore while hunting right whales, and came upon a school of large, bluff-headed whales with forward-angled spouts.”
“Mr. Crozier prefers to employ a bluff headed projectile, formed with the punch in a slight concave with rounded outer edges; as that shape will not detract from the weight of the head so much as the spherical, and if the projectile can be thrown without rotary motion, a hexagonal punch might be employed.”
“The hole made by a round or bluff-headed shot is of the same conical form as that made by a flat-headed projectile, but with a pointed shot the sides of the hole are more nearly parallel, the reason probably being, that a conical hole, of small diameter, is at first broken out by the action of the point, and then enlarged and made parallel by the body of the shot following through.”
“A bluff-headed bullet from the right barrel of the .303 catching him on the shoulder brought him to a full stop, where he lay opening and shutting his huge jaws, a sort of mark-time business.”
“I beseech every man who may read this to be perfectly convinced that I feel no pity for these bluff-headed fellows.”
“Whether is it the African Negro, with his thick lips, flat nose, woolly head, and sable hide; the copper-colored Maroon; the stunted, blubber-eating Esquimaux; the filthy, goose-rumped Hottentot; or the bluff- headed, red-faced, potbellied John Bull?”
“He proved to be a large vulgar, thick bluff headed looking Englishman, without a coat, in a striped undressed cotton shirt, white flannel pants and straw hat.”
“"I pity these bluff-headed Saxon boors, because they know no better," replied Walter, staggering, as a stone struck him on the temple;”
CEFR level
C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.