Yards and feet. You may add the inches if needed, to be absolutely precise. 'Mary's boat is 4 yards, 2 feet and 3 inches long.'
800
Yards and yards are the same measurement. Therefore, 19 yards is equal to 19 yards.
Yards and yards are the same measurement. Therefore, 50 yards is equal to 50 yards.
Yards and yards are the same length, so there are three (3) yards in three (3) yards
Feet?
600 yards for a ship and 400 yards for a boat or 1800 feet for a ship and 1200 feet for a boat
Yards and feet. You may add the inches if needed, to be absolutely precise. 'Mary's boat is 4 yards, 2 feet and 3 inches long.'
100 yards, i found lots of answers online that said 500 yards but when i took my test it was wrong, the correct answer was 100 yards
The halyard raises or lowers the sails. The term comes from "haul yards" as in hauling yards of sail.
100 yards, i found lots of answers online that said 500 yards but when i took my test it was wrong, the correct answer was 100 yards
Yards and feet. There are no boats that are a mile long!
500-1000 yards depending on tonnage and captains maneuvering space required
100 YARDS
A boater may not approach within 100 yards of a military vessel; it must slow to minimum speed within 500 yards of any naval vessel.
Once a rope on a boat/ship has an assigned duty, it is a line: hence the trick question of how many ropes are there on a boat -there are none, because they are all called lines. The line you are referring to is generally called a halyard. This term derives from "Haul Yards" as in hauling yards of canvas aloft.
Anything that measures 39 feet. A boat? A property line? a football play? a golf shot?