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BUNT

Volume 3 · 108 words · 1797 Edition

BUNT of a SAIL, the middle part of it, formed designedly into a bag or cavity, that the sail may gather more wind. It is used mostly in top-sails, because courses are generally cut square, or with but small allowance for bunt or compass. The bunt holds much leeward wind; that is, it hangs much to leeward.

Bunt-Lines are small lines made fast to the bottom of the sails, in the middle part of the bolt-rope, to a cringle, and to are reeved through a small block, fixed to the yard. Their use is to trice up the bunt of the sail for the better furling it up.