battleship
See also: battle ship
English
Etymology
battle + ship; shortened from line-of-battle ship, attested 1794. Doublet of ship of the line.
Noun
battleship (plural battleships)
- (military, nautical) A large capital warship displacing tens of thousands of tons, heavily armoured and armed with big guns; now obsolescent and replaced by smaller vessels with guided missiles.
- (military, nautical, archaic) A ship of the line.
- A non-functional rocket stage, used for configuration and integration tests.
- A guessing game played on grid paper; see Battleship (game).
Hyponyms
(type of warship):
- dreadnought
- pre-dreadnought
- semi-dreadnought
- super-dreadnought
- treaty battleship
Derived terms
- battleship curve
- battleship gray
- battleship-gray
- battleship-grey
- battleship grey
- battleshippy
- battleship-shaped curve
- fast battleship
- heavy battleship
- land battleship
- light battleship
- pocket battleship
- super battleship
Related terms
- battlecruiser
Translations
warship
|
non-functional rocket stage
guessing game
|
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
|
See also
- dreadnought
- cruiser
- destroyer
- frigate
- sloop
- corvette
- monitor
- gunboat
- torpedo boat
- aircraft carrier
References
- Douglas Harper (2001–2023), “battleship”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.