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BUTT

Volume 2 · 101 words · 1778 Edition

in commerce, a vessel or measure of wine, containing two hogsheads, or 126 gallons. See Pipe.

Butt-end, in the sea-language, are the fore-ends of all planks under water, as they rise, and are joined one end to another.—Butt-ends in great ships are most carefully bolted; for if any one of them should spring or give way, the leak would be very dangerous and difficult to stop.

Butts, the place where archers meet with their bows and arrows to shoot at a mark, which we call shooting at the butts.—Also butts are the short pieces of land in arable ridges and furrows.