I found tale to be most entertaining but I am worried—are you really going to build a boat??? And what do you know about boats. Although vocabulary is impressive..you sound like a sea dog. Forget boat impossible to do.
So sweet!
I found tale to be most entertaining but I am worried—are you really going to build a boat??? And what do you know about boats. Although vocabulary is impressive..you sound like a sea dog. Forget boat impossible to do.
So I went back to naval history (specifically the Royal Navy), and found that ships generally had an abbreviated description of the service to which the ship belonged, then a description of the vessel type, and then the name itself.
For example, HMS Frigate Boadicea would belong to His Majesty's Service (i.e., in the Royal Navy), would be a frigate-class ship (38 guns), and be called the Boadicea.
Privateers, which were ships licensed by the King to attack enemy vessels but were not part of the navy proper, were signified "HMHV": His Majesty's Hired Vessel.
I have taken that to the next (logical) step to come up with the designation "PV": Private Vessel.
As for the class my boat belongs in, I don't know that there is one: It's no doubt a pirogue (flat-bottomed, double-ended canoe), but it will eventually sport a single-mast square sail and, perhaps, a transom. I doubt any such vessel has ever existed in the history of boat building.
So I determined it is a new class, the Merganser class. This is in tribute to Fred, in gratitude for all of his invaluable help on this project. (Fred had proffered the name "Merganser" or "Smew" for the boat, when I was casting about for names.)
A merganser is a fish-eating seaduck, although almost all mergansers live in and on rivers rather than the sea. While a Ruddy Duck is not technically in the merganser family, I thought it was close enough.
So, the offical name of The Boat is PV Merganser Ruddy Duck.
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