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sheet anchor. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
sheet anchor, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
sheet anchor in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
sheet anchor you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
From shoot and anchor.
Pronunciation
Noun
sheet anchor (plural sheet anchors)
- (nautical) A large, spare anchor used in an emergency.
1661, anonymous author, A Narrative of the Success of the Voyage of the Right Honourable Heaneage Finch, London, page 3:The Ship having thus depth of water again, and come into a place of some convenient anchourage, our first anchour not holding us, we let fall our sheet anchour […]
1719, Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe, London: W. Taylor, page 10:By Noon the Sea went very high indeed, and our Ship rid Forecastle in, shipp’d several Seas, and we thought once or twice our Anchor had come home; upon which our Master order’d out the Sheet Anchor; so that we rode with two Anchors a-Head, and the Cables vered out to the better End.
- (by extension) A source of help in times of danger; last resort.
- 1691, Ezekiel Hopkins, An Exposition of the Ten Commandments, with Other Sermons, London: Nathanael Ranew, “The Ninth Commandment,” p. 62,
- And doubtless when other Arguments have been baffled by a Temptation, this hath been a Sheet Anchor to the Soul, and hath often held it in the greatest Storms, when the Wind and Waves have beat most furiously against it.
1872, Mark Twain, chapter 14, in Roughing It, Hartford, CT: American Publishing Company, page 115:[…] you can imagine how like being struck by lightning it was to find myself in a country where written contracts were worthless!—that main security, that sheet-anchor, that absolute necessity, of business.
1955, Samuel Beckett, translated by Patrick Bowles and Samuel Beckett, Molloy, New York: Grove Press, Part 2, pp. 171-172:[…] I had the joyful vision of myself far from home, from the familiar faces, from all my sheet-anchors, sitting on a milestone in the dark […]
- 1971, Nelson Mandela, letter to the wife of fellow-prisoner Mac Maharaj dated 1 February, 1971, in Sahm Venter (ed.), The Prison Letters of Nelson Mandela, New York: Liveright, 2018,
- It is the prettiest portrait of her that I’ve seen. Its message is clear & unambiguous: Darling I’m the centre of the universe; sheet anchor of all your dreams!
- (cricket) A batsman who provides dependable defence while a series of other batsmen score rapidly.
Translations
nautical: a large, spare anchor
a source of help in times of danger
cricket: a batsman who provides dependable defence while a series of other batsmen score rapidly