captain
Contributor
It's rope when on the spool. It becomes a line, rode, halyard, etc. when it is given a designated task on a boat.
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Its a line huh? Except when its not... It could be a sheet, a halyard oh and yea rode![]()
A rope is a rope only when on land... once on, or in, the water it is a line![]()
It's rope when on the spool. It becomes a line, rode, halyard, etc. when it is given a designated task on a boat.
What about the term SCUBA ? as in SCUBA Diving ?
Don't you 'murricans say "kitting up"? I've never heard, read or seen the term "gearing up", at least not when the meaning is "putting on your scuba gear"wonder how "gear" became dominant in the US for "diving equipment"? Same question for "kit" in the UK.
Don't you 'murricans say "kitting up"?
I've never heard, read or seen the term "gearing up", at least not when the meaning is "putting on your scuba gear"
Same question for "kit" in the UK. The common denominator is a single syllable word that was hijacked from the language long before SCUBA was developed.
Gear up and gearing up are common west of the Atlantic. Telling somebody to "gear up" is common with SCUBA gear.Don't you 'murricans say "kitting up"? I've never heard, read or seen the term "gearing up", at least not when the meaning is "putting on your scuba gear"