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ALOOF

Volume 1 · 141 words · 1810 Edition

has frequently been mentioned as a term; but whether justly or not, we shall not presume to determine. It is known in common discourse to imply at a distance; and the resemblance of the phrase "keep aloof," and keep a *luff*, or keep the *luff*, in all probability gave rise to this conjecture. If it was really a ALPESE sea-phrase originally, it seems to have referred to the dangers of a lee-shore, in which situation the pilot might naturally apply it in the sense commonly understood, viz. keep all off, or quite off; it is, however, never expressed in that manner by seamen now. See LUFF.

It may not be improper to observe, that besides using this phrase in the same sense with us, the French also call the weather-side of a ship, and the weather-clue of a course, le lof.