PRIME, TO. To make ready a gun, mine, &c., for instantaneous firing.
Also, to pierce the cartridge with the priming-wire, and apply the quill-tube in readiness for firing the cannon.--_To prime a fire-ship._ To lay the train for being set on fire.--_To prime a match._ Put a little wet bruised powder made into the paste called devil, upon the end of the rope slow-match, with a piece of paper wrapped round it.
PRIME VERTICAL. That great circle which pa.s.ses through the zenith and the east and west points of the horizon.
PRIMING-IRONS. Consist of a pointed wire used through the vent to p.r.i.c.k the cartridge when it is "home," and of a flat-headed one similarly inserted after discharge to insure its not retaining any ignited particles.
PRIMING-VALVES. The same with escape-valves.
PRINTED INSTRUCTIONS. The name of the volume formerly issued by the admiralty to all commanders of ships and vessels for their guidance; now superseded by Queen"s Regulations.
PRISE, TO. To raise, or slue, weighty bodies by means of a lever purchase or power. (_See_ PRIZING.)
PRISE-BOLTS. k.n.o.bs of iron on the cheeks of a gun-carriage to keep the handspike from slipping when prising up the breech.
PRISM. In dioptrics, is a geometrical solid bounded by three parallelograms, whose bases are equal triangles.
PRISMATIC COMPa.s.s. One so fitted with a gla.s.s prism for reading by reflection, that the eye can simultaneously observe an object and read its compa.s.s bearing.
PRISONER AT LARGE. Free to take exercise within bounds.
PRISONERS OF WAR. Men who are captured after an engagement, who are deprived of their liberty until regularly exchanged, or dismissed on their parole.
PRISONER UNDER RESTRAINT. Suspended from duty; deprived of command.
PRISON-SHIP. One fitted up for receiving and detaining prisoners of war.
PRITCH. A dentated weapon for striking and holding eels.
PRIVATE. The proper designation of a soldier serving in the ranks of the army, holding no special position.
PRIVATEER PRACTICE, OR PRIVATEERISM. Disorderly conduct, or anything out of man-of-war rules.
PRIVATEERS, or men-of-war equipped by individuals for cruising against the enemy; their commission (_see_ LETTERS OF MARQUE) is given by the admiralty, and revocable by the same authority. They have no property in any prize until it is legally condemned by a competent court. The admiral on the station is ent.i.tled to a tenth of their booty. This infamous species of warfare is unhappily not yet abolished among civilized nations.
PRIVATE PROPERTY. Commissions of privateers do not extend to the capture of private property on land; a right not even granted to men-of-war.
Private armed ships are not within the terms of a capitulation protecting private property generally.
PRIVATE SIGNAL. Understood by captains having the key, but totally incomprehensible to other persons.
PRIVY-COAT. A light coat or defence of mail, concealed under the ordinary dress.
PRIZE. A vessel captured at sea from the enemies of a state, or from pirates, either by a man-of-war or privateer. Vessels are also looked upon as _prize_, if they fight under any other standard than that of the state from which they have their commission, if they have no charter-party, and if loaded with effects belonging to the enemy, or with contraband goods. In ships of war, the prizes are to be divided among the officers, seamen, &c., according to the act; but in privateers, according to the agreement between the owners. By statute 13 Geo. II. c. 4, judges and officers failing in their duty in respect to the condemnation of prizes, forfeit 500, with full costs of suit, one moiety to the crown, and the other to the informer. Prize, according to jurists, is altogether a creature of the crown; and no man can have any interest but what he takes as the mere gift of the crown. Partial interest has been granted away at different times, but the statute of Queen Anne (A.D. 1708) is the first which gave to the captors the whole of the benefit.
PRIZE ACT OF 1793. Ordained that the officers and sailors on board every ship and vessel of war shall have the sole property in all captures, being first adjudged lawful prize, to be divided in such proportions and manner as His Majesty should order by proclamation. In 1746 a man, though involuntarily kept abroad above three years in the service of his country, was deemed to have forfeited his share to Greenwich.
PRIZE-ACTS. Though expiring with each war, are usually revived nearly in the same form.
PRIZEAGE. The tenth share belonging to the crown out of a lawful prize taken at sea.
PRIZE-COURT. A department of the admiralty court; (_oyer et terminer_) to hear and determine according to the law of nations.
PRIZE-GOODS. Those taken upon the high seas, _jure belli_, from the enemy.
PRIZE-LIST. A return of all the persons on board, whether belonging to the ship, or supernumeraries, at the time a capture is made; those who may be absent on duty are included.
PRIZE-MASTER. The officer to whom a prize is given in charge to carry her into port.
PRIZE-MONEY. The profits arising from the sale of prizes. It was divided equally by chart. 5 Hen. IV.
PRIZING. The application of a lever to lift or move any weighty body.
Also, the act of pressing or squeezing an article into its package, so that its size may be reduced in stowage.
PROA, OR FLYING PROW. _See_ PRAHU.
PROBATION. The noviciate period of cadets, midshipmen, apprentices, &c.
PROBE. A surgical sounder.--_To probe._ To inquire thoroughly into a matter.
PROCEEDS. The product or produce of prizes, &c.
PROCESSION. A march in official order. At a naval or military funeral, the officers are cla.s.sed according to seniority, the chiefs last.
PROCURATION, LETTERS OF. Are required to be exhibited in the purchase of ships by agents in the enemy"s country.
PROCYON. a _Canis minoris_, the princ.i.p.al star of the Lesser Dog.
PROD. A poke or slight thrust; as in _persuading_ with a bayonet.
PRODD. A cross-bow for throwing bullets, _temp._ Hen. VII.
PRODUCTION. For obtaining the benefits of trading with our colonies, it is necessary that the goods be accompanied by a "certificate of production" in the manner required by marine law. (_See_ ORIGIN.)
PROFILE DRAUGHTS. In naval architecture, a name applied to two drawings from the sheer draught: one represents the entire construction and disposition of the ship; the other, her whole interior work and fittings.
PROFILE OF A FORT. _See_ ORTHOGRAPHIC PROJECTION.
PROG. A quaint word for victuals. Swift says, "In town you may find better prog." It is also a spike.
PROGRESSION. _See_ ARC OF DIRECTION.
PROJECTILES. Bodies which are driven by any one effort of force from the spot where it was applied.
PROJECTION. A method of representing geometrically on a plane surface varied points, lines, and surfaces not lying in any one plane: used in charts and maps, where it is of various kinds, as globular, orthographic, Mercator"s, &c. In ship-building, an elevation taken amidship. (_See_ BODY-PLAN.)
PROKING-SPIT. A long Spanish rapier.
PROMISCUI USUS. A law term for those articles which are equally applicable to peace or war.
PROMONTORY. A high point of land or rock projecting into a sea or lake, tapering into a neck inland, and the extremity of which, towards the water, is called a cape, or headland, as Gibraltar, Ceuta, Actium, &c.