enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. International Talk Like a Pirate Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Talk_Like_a...

    International Talk Like a Pirate Day is a parodic holiday created in 1995 by John Baur and Mark Summers of Albany, Oregon, [1] who proclaimed September 19 each year as the day when everyone in the world should talk like a pirate (that is, in English with a stereotypical West Country accent). [2] It has since been adopted by the Pastafarianism ...

  3. Pirates in the arts and popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirates_in_the_arts_and...

    Engraving of the English pirate Blackbeard from the 1724 book A General History of the Pyrates Pirates fight over treasure in a 1911 Howard Pyle illustration.. In English-speaking popular culture, the modern pirate stereotype owes its attributes mostly to the imagined tradition of the 18th-century Caribbean pirate sailing off the Spanish Main and to such celebrated 20th-century depictions as ...

  4. Shiver my timbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiver_my_timbers

    It is employed as a literary device by authors to express shock, surprise, or annoyance. The phrase is based on real nautical slang and is a reference to the timbers, which are the wooden support frames of a sailing ship. In heavy seas, ships would be lifted up and pounded down so hard as to "shiver" the timbers, startling the sailors. Such an ...

  5. Pirate (sexual slang) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirate_(sexual_slang)

    The most common usage is Australian slang for a man searching around for casual sex, as in "on the pirate" or the verb "to pirate". [2] It has also been used to describe a pimp who steals a prostitute from another pimp. [2] A more recent slang usage is a fictitious sex act called "the pirate" or "the angry pirate". [3]

  6. Sailors' superstitions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailors'_superstitions

    The origins of the name are unclear, and many theories have been put forth, including an actual David Jones, who was a pirate on the Indian Ocean in the 1630s; [51] a pub owner who kidnapped sailors and then dumped them onto any passing ship; [52] the incompetent Duffer Jones, a notoriously myopic sailor who often found himself over-board; [53 ...

  7. Black Spot (Treasure Island) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Spot_(Treasure_Island)

    A Vagrant has a pirate receive a black spot from another before he is shot for pointing out that Stevenson invented the practice. 2012: In "Idiots Are People Three", season 6 episode 3 of the TV series 30 Rock , Jack Donaghy hands Criss (Liz Lemon's new boyfriend) a black spot while telling Liz he is Officially Disapproving of Criss (with no "H ...

  8. Walking the plank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walking_the_plank

    Pirate John Derdrake, active in the Baltic in the late 1700s, was said to have drowned all his victims by forcing them to walk the plank. [ 6 ] In July 1822, William Smith, captain of the British sloop Blessing , was forced to walk the plank by the Spanish pirate crew of the schooner Emanuel in the West Indies .

  9. Golden Age of Piracy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Age_of_Piracy

    The Life and Tryals of the Gentleman Pirate, Major Stede Bonnet. Virginia Beach, VA: Köehlerbooks. ISBN 978-1-6466-3151-3. Pérotin-Dumon, Anne (1991). "The Pirate and the Emperor: Power and the Law on the Seas, 1450–1850". In Tracy, James D. (ed.). The Political Economy of Merchant Empires State Power and World Trade, 1350–1750. Studies ...