men-of-war Antonyms
Strongest:
- cruisers
- argosies
- traders
- tankers
- merchant-ships
- steamships
- corvettes
- steamers
- merchantmen
- ironclads
- lightships
- colliers
- aircraft-carriers
- ships
- liners
- warships
- supertankers
- ferryboats
- freighters
- barges
- cutters
- containerships
Strong:
- flagships
- barques
- brigs
- caravels
- coasters
- superliners
- watercrafts
- schooners
- tramps
- brigantines
- vessels
- keels
- icebreakers
- destroyers
- motor-ships
- boats
- transports
- packets
Weak:
Meaning of men-of-war
Webster
men-of-war (pl.)
of Manofwar
men-of-war Sentence Examples
- The mighty armada of men-of-war sailed into the harbor, their cannons roaring with thunderous salvos.
- The privateers, in their swift men-of-war, harried the merchant ships, plundering their precious cargo.
- The opposing fleets of men-of-war clashed in a deafening naval battle, their hulls ramming and their guns blazing.
- The British men-of-war maintained a tight blockade, preventing supplies from reaching the enemy port.
- The Spanish galleons, laden with gold, were vulnerable targets for the agile men-of-war.
- The admiral's flagship, a colossal man-of-war, led the charge into the enemy lines.
- The pirates' men-of-war were feared throughout the Caribbean, their raids spreading terror among seafarers.
- The ancient men-of-war, powered by oars and sails, were marvels of maritime engineering.
- The experimental ironclad men-of-war transformed naval warfare, making wooden ships obsolete.
- The navies of the competing nations each boasted a formidable fleet of men-of-war, ready to engage in bloody conflicts.
FAQs About the word men-of-war
of Manofwar
cruisers, argosies, traders, tankers, merchant ships, steamships, corvettes, steamers,merchantmen, ironclads
No antonyms found.
The mighty armada of men-of-war sailed into the harbor, their cannons roaring with thunderous salvos.
The privateers, in their swift men-of-war, harried the merchant ships, plundering their precious cargo.
The opposing fleets of men-of-war clashed in a deafening naval battle, their hulls ramming and their guns blazing.
The British men-of-war maintained a tight blockade, preventing supplies from reaching the enemy port.