breechen
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]breechen (plural breechens)
- (historical) A rope used to limit the recoil of a cannon on a ship
- 1793, Transactions of the Society Instituted at London for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce[1], volume XI, pages 189–90:
- In order to prevent any accidents which might happen, by the iron pin of the carriage giving way, from so sudden a shock, a breechen is made fast, from the sliding carriage, to the head of the boat, and properly secured: the gun being fired, the elasticity of the breechen permits her to recoil about two inches, which certainly is a much less strain to the boat, and a safer method of using the gun; for, allowing the breechen to break, there is then the same principle of the iron pin to be depended upon, as at present.
- 1839, The London Saturday Journal, No. XVIII, 4 May, 1839, London: William Smith, p. 274, [2]
- The gun is discharged by means of a lock screwed on to the side of a vent-patch near the touch-hole, and its recoil is limited by a stout piece of rope called a breechen, which is rove through a ring at the breech, the ends being secured to bolts on each side of the port-hole.
- 1924, Herman Melville, chapter 20, in Billy Budd[3], London: Constable & Co.:
- Mounted on lumbering wooden carriages they were hampered with cumbersome harness of breechen and strong side-tackles for running them out. Guns and carriages, together with the long rammers and shorter lintstocks lodged in loops overhead—all these, as customary, were painted black; and the heavy hempen breechens, tarred to the same tint, wore the like livery of the undertakers.
- The part of the harness that fits over the horse's rump and holds the load back or permits the horse to back it up [4]
- 1884, Saddlers, Harness Makers, and Carriage Builders' Gazette, London: John Kemp, 1 November, 1884, Vol. XIV, pp. 155-6, [5]
- Remember, when a horse is on its side the kicking-strap is useless, and the breechen nearly so, to prevent the swing of its hind legs; your aim is to get it away from the steps or wheel-plate of the trap, which, in its struggles, may cut its legs fearfully.
- 2014, Alice Taylor, Do You Remember?[6], O'Brien Press:
- The breechen kept pressure back off the horse's hind quarters when they braked — the horses were very aware of this and paid close attention to its functioning.
- 1884, Saddlers, Harness Makers, and Carriage Builders' Gazette, London: John Kemp, 1 November, 1884, Vol. XIV, pp. 155-6, [5]