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to fetch it, when otherwise the boxes do not hold the water left on them. FANGS. The valves of the pump-boxes. FANIONS. Small flags used in surveying stations, named after the bannerets carried by horse brigades, and corrupted from the Italian word _gonfalone_, a standard. FANNAG-VARRY. The Erse term for a shag or cormorant, still in use on our north-western shores, and in the Isle of Man. FANNING. The technical phrase for breadthening the after-part of the tops. Also, widening in general. FANNING-BREEZE. One so gentle that the sail alternately swells and collapses. FANTODS. A name given to the fidgets of officers, who are styled jib-and-staysail Jacks. FARDAGE. Dunnage; when a ship is laden in bulk. FARE [Anglo-Saxon, _fara_]. A voyage or passage by water, or the money paid for such passage. Also, a fishing season for cod; and likewise the cargo of the fishing vessel. (_See_ HOW FARE YE?) FARE-CROFTS. The vessels that formerly plied between England and France. FARRANE. The Erse term for a gentle breeze, still used on our north-western shores. FARTHEL. An old word for furling sails. Also, a burden, according to Shakspeare in _Hamlet_; and a weight, agreeably to the depositions of the "Portingalls" before Sir Francis Drake, _in re_ the great carrack's cargo in 1592; there were "ij^_c_ fardells of synamon:" of this famous prize the queen reserved to herself the lion's share. FASCINES. Faggots of brush or other small wood, varying according to the object in view and the material available, from about 6 to 9 inches in diameter, and from 6 to 18 feet in length, firmly bound with withes at about every 18 inches. They are of vast use in military field-engineering. FASH. An irregular seam. The mark left by the moulds upon cast bullets. (Short for _fashion_--ship-fashion, soldier-fashion.) FASHION-PIECES. The fashion of the after-part of a ship, in the plane of projection. They are the hindmost timbers in the run of a ship, which terminate the breadth, and form the shape of the stern; they are united to the stern-post, and to the end of the wing-transom by a rabbet. FASKIDAR. A name of the _Cataractes parasiticus_, or Arctic gull. FAST. A rope, cablet, or chain by which a vessel is secured to a wharf; and termed bow, head, breast, quarter, or stern fasts, as the case may be. FAST AGROUND. Immovable, or high and dry. FAST AND LOOSE. An uncertain and shuffling conduct. FASTENINGS. "Let
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