parbuckle

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Earliest forms are parbuncle, parbunkel and parbunkle. Of unknown earlier origin. Influenced by buckle and French boucle (loop)

Noun

parbuckle (plural parbuckles)

  1. A kind of purchase for hoisting or lowering a cylindrical burden, as a cask. The middle of a long rope is fastened aloft, and both ends of the rope are looped under, then over the cylinder and looped back towards the attachment point. The object rests in the loops, and rolls upward in them as the rope ends are hauled up, or downward when the ends are payed out.
  2. A double sling made of a single rope, for slinging a cask, gun, etc.

Translations

Verb

parbuckle (third-person singular simple present parbuckles, present participle parbuckling, simple past and past participle parbuckled)

  1. To hoist or lower by means of a parbuckle

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.