- A
galley was a type of ship
which relied mostly on
oars for
propulsion that was used for warfare, trade, and
piracy mostly in the seas
surrounding Europe...
-
Civil War.
Gibbs noted that, "We, the
colored men of the North, put the
laboring oar in your hand; it is for
white men to show that they are
equal to the...
- fender.
pulling (of an
oar, as used at sea)
using an
oar for
propulsion of a boat
where each
person (of several) uses one
oar. This
contrasts with rowing...
- (/ˈtraɪriːm/ TRY-reem;
derived from Latin: trirēmis "with
three banks of
oars"; cf. Gr**** triērēs,
literally "three-rower") was an
ancient vessel and a...
-
acting as
coxswain in
charge of the boat
under oars. The AB
shall demonstrate ability to row by
pulling an
oar in the boat. The
applicant shall also demonstrate...
- and
Psychology courses. In the 1940s, the
Order of
Augustinian Recollects (
OAR)
envisioned the
establishment of a
Catholic School that
performs a three-fold...
- "For Wyc
Grousbeck '83,
success and
teamwork have
never been an
either oar situation".
Princeton Alumni.
Retrieved February 14, 2023. "M**** Eye and...
-
tosses an
oar out of the boat as it
drifts from the s****.
Richard swims after them
followed closely by a shark.
Emmeline throws the
other oar at the shark...
-
rowing in a galley,
either a
convicted criminal sentenced to work at the
oar (French: galérien), or a kind of
human chattel,
sometimes a
prisoner of war...
- world's most
extreme weather". USA Today.
Retrieved May 17, 2020. US EPA,
OAR (June 27, 2016). "Climate
Change Indicators:
Weather and Climate". Epa.gov...