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1) "Monster" -- As to monster cutters 1mon·ster Pronunciation: 'män(t)-st&r Function: noun Etymology: Middle English monstre, from Anglo-French, from Latin monstrum omen, monster, from monEre to warn -- more at MIND 1 a : an animal or plant of abnormal form or structure b : one who deviates from normal or acceptable behavior or character 2 : a threatening force 3 a : an animal of strange or terrifying shape b : one unusually large for its kind 4 : something monstrous; especially : a person of unnatural or extreme ugliness, deformity, wickedness, or cruelty 5 : one that is highly successful Pronunciation Symbols yellow Monster is a term for any number of legendary creatures that frequently appear in mythology, legend, and horror fiction. The word originates from the ancient Latin monstros, monstrum, from the root of monere, "to warn", also meaning prodigy, miracle. Saint George versus the Dragon, by Gustave Moreau (1880) - 1 Social concept
- 1.1 Religion and mythology
- 2 Monsters in literature
- 3 Monsters in philosophy
- 4 Monsters in cinema
- 4.1 Pre-World War II
- 4.2 Post World War II
- 5 Miscellaneous
- 6 See also
| At one time, the monster was an important social concept, because monsters were often associated with unknown lands and unknown things. For instance, historically, unexplored areas on maps would be marked indicating that monsters lived there. This connection between monsters and the unknown meant that the monster was an important concept in the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, as Western society began to use science and other academic disciplines to try to understand the unknown. In addition, monsters were seen as scientific puzzles; a strange and particular thing that the science needed to understand and further explore. In the Enlightenment, the cabinet of curiosities would often include monsters in amongst the scientific instruments and toys. Similarly, the monstrous was an important concept on aesthetics during the enlightenment, often closely associated with the wondrous and the sublime. Detail from The Temptation of Saint Anthony by Matthias Grünewald, 1515. Many Eastern religions such as Hinduism, as well as ancient religions such as Greek mythology and Norse mythology, depict monsters as the enemies of the gods. Ragnarok in Norse mythology was the final battle between the gods of Asgard and the many monsters of..."
2) "Cutters" -- As to monster cutters cut·ter Pronunciation: 'k&-t&r Function: noun 1 : one that cuts: a : one whose work is cutting or involves cutting b (1) : an instrument, machine, machine part, or tool that cuts (2) : a device for vibrating a cutting stylus in disc recording; also : the stylus or its point 2 a : a ship's boat for carrying stores or passengers b : a single-masted fore-and-aft rigged sailing vessel c : a small armed vessel in government service 3 : a light sleigh Pronunciation Symbols An American-looking gaff cutter with a genoa jib set This French yawl has a gaff topsail set. Forget the mizzen and this boat looks like a cutter. Crabcutter, Neuharlingersiel, Germany When used in a nautical sense, a cutter is: - a small single-masted vessel, fore-and-aft rigged, with two or more headsails, a bowsprit, and a mast set further back than in a sloop
- a ship's boat, powered by oars, sails or motor, used to carry passengers or light stores
- a small or medium sized armed vessel used by various marine or naval services such as the US Coast Guard.
- 1 Sailing
- 2 Rowing
- 3 Pulling
- 3.1 Concerning the use of a kedge, see also:
- 4 Revenue
- 5 United States Coast Guard
- 6 External links
| Traditionally the sloop rig was a rig with a single mast located forward of 70% of the length of the sailplan. In this traditional definition a sloop could have multiple jibs on a fixed bowsprit. Cutters had a rig with a single mast more centrally located, which could vary from 50% to 70%of the length of the sailplan, with multiple headsails and a reeving bowsprit. Somewhere in the 1950's or 1960's there was a shift in these definitions such that a sloop only flew one headsail and a cutter had multiple headsails and mast position became irrelevant. In this modern idiom, then, a cutter is a sailing vessel with more than one head sail and one mast. In a traditional vessel there would normally be also, a bowsprit to carry a jib set flying from the bowsprit end via a traveller (to preserve the ability to reef the bowsprit), while in modern vessels the jib is set from a topmast forestay permanently fixed to the end of a fixed (non-reeving) bowsprit, or directly to the stem fitting of the bow itself. (The sloop carries only one head sail, properly called a foresail t..."
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