Table of Contents
Rhymes with Ship Breaker
- straker
- spraker
- staker
- quaker
- kraker
- fraker
- craker
- braker
- blaker
- taker
- shaker
- saker
- raker
- maker
- laker
- faker
- bakker
- baker
- acre
- achor
2. breaker
noun. ['ˈbreɪkɝ'] a device that trips like a switch and opens the circuit when overloaded.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- -er (English)
- -er (Middle English (1100-1500))
- break (English)
- breken (Middle English (1100-1500))
3. breaker
noun. ['ˈbreɪkɝ'] a quarry worker who splits off blocks of stone.
Synonyms
Etymology
- -er (English)
- -er (Middle English (1100-1500))
- break (English)
- breken (Middle English (1100-1500))
4. breaker
noun. ['ˈbreɪkɝ'] waves breaking on the shore.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- -er (English)
- -er (Middle English (1100-1500))
- break (English)
- breken (Middle English (1100-1500))
5. ship
noun. ['ˈʃɪp'] a vessel that carries passengers or freight.
Synonyms
- icebreaker
- gas-turbine ship
- cargo ship
- screw
- spar
- fo'c'sle
- cookhouse
- skeleton
- passenger ship
- cargo hold
- sister ship
- top
- hold
- log
- whaling ship
- funnel
- stern
- tail
- minesweeper
- training ship
- fin
- porthole
- bulwark
- iceboat
- flagship
- winch
- combat ship
- gyrostabilizer
- ratline
- watercraft
- bulkhead
- quarter
- sea anchor
- galley
- school ship
- bilge pump
- poop
- fleet
- wreck
- supply ship
- sheet
- war vessel
- deck
- ship's galley
- underframe
- minelayer
- steamship
- troopship
- three-decker
- nuclear-powered ship
- shroud
- storage area
- slave ship
- caboose
- derelict
- shipwreck
- tack
- bilge well
- helm
- ridge rope
- pirate
- bay
- cargo deck
- lubber's hole
- windlass
- hospital ship
- warship
- superstructure
- whaler
- screw propeller
- cargo area
- hulk
- vessel
- weather sheet
- drogue
- lightship
- ratlin
- small ship
- forecastle
- riding bitt
- gyrostabiliser
- after part
- crow's nest
- frame
- transport ship
- skeletal frame
- steamer
- blockade-runner
- pirate ship
- davit
- topside
- cargo vessel
- abandoned ship
- tender
- treasure ship
Etymology
- ship (Middle English (1100-1500))