Yngling
See also: yngling
English
Etymology
From Norwegian yngling, Danish yngling, Swedish yngling (“youngster”); from Old Norse ungr (“young”) + -lingr (diminutive suffix, compare -ling), also a surname in Old Norse. Doublet of youngling.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɪŋ.lɪŋ/
- Rhymes: -ɪŋ
Noun
Yngling (plural Ynglings)
- A type of two-man keelboat from Norway.
- 1994, Richard Sherwood, A Field Guide to Sailboats of North America, page 108:
- The Yngling is highly stable, with a beam-to-waterline ratio of .37 and with 50 percent of the weight in ballast.
- 2004, The Engineering of Sport: 5: Volume 1, published by the International Sports Engineering Association, page 606:
- [...] of the Yngling was calculated based on the known mass of the boat, including all equipment, and an estimation of the mass of the three female crew members. A triangular surface mesh was constructed on the Yngling geometry, with computational cells clustered and refined in regions of predominant interest and high surface curvature eg keel/rudder leading and trailing edges.
- 2008 (or 2004 August 23?), Ron Pattenden, Land on my right: Solo sail round Britain on a Laser, Lulu.com, →ISBN, page 91:
- And what a terrific performance by our girls in the Yngling. […] A strange name - do you Yngle it or sail it.
- 2009, Garry Hoyt, Go for the Green: The New Case for Sail and Solar Power, page 35:
- For example, to insist on the inclusion of female match racing in Ynglings amounts to a foolish fixation on an arcane and visually unexciting aspect of the sport.
Usage notes
- This noun is usually capitalized, but is sometimes written in lowercase, as yngling. (It is not a trademark or brand name, and does not derive from the proper noun below.)
See also
- Yngling (keelboat) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Proper noun
Yngling
Derived terms
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