< Hydrofoilbåt
Light, high-powered vessels, often with stepped hulls, designed to plane along the surface of the water at great speed.[en]
< fartøy etter type omgivelser
Collocates descriptors for watercraft used on enclosed bodies of relatively protected water, such as rivers, lakes, and canals.[en]
< Arbeids- og servicefartøy
Vessels specially designed with reinforced bow and powerful engines for breaking navigable channels through heavy ice, especially the pack ice of extreme northern latitudes.[en]
< Innlandsfartøy
Boatlike vehicles equipped with, usually, three runners and propelled by sails over ice.[en]
< Krigsskip
Light, fast warships designed to operate offensively as attack craft with antisubmarine weapons; originally developed at the end of the 19th century to counter torpedo boats.[en]
< Fartøy for legging og vedlikehold av infrastruktur
Vessels fitted for laying and repairing underwater communications cables.[en]
< Fartøy framdrevet med padleåre
< Innlandsfartøy
Watercraft designed for use on canals generally long and narrow with bow and stern often nearly vertical for increased cargo capacity.[en]
< Fartøy framdrevet med padleåre
Lightly built, slender, open craft of shallow draft that are paddled and not rowed and normally double-ended; may have sails.[en]
< Krigsskip
Relatively small warships armed with one or more guns; such vessels are most commonly used for local defense and inland patrol, but gunboats of the late 19th and early 20th centuries could be quite substantial.[en]
< Konkurransebåt
Extremely light and slender boats used for sculling and racing, generally consisting of a very thin shell or skin over a fragile framework with sliding seats for the rowers. Shells are not over 2 feet wide and usually have outriggers for the oars.[en]
< seilfartøy etter form
Large, seagoing ships of the 15th through 17th century, distinguished by high sterncastle, high, overhanging forecastle, and a low waist; could be used either as a merchant vessel or warship; usually square-rigged on the fore- and mainmast and lateen-rigged on the remaining one to three masts.[en]
< seilfartøy etter form
Small to medium-sized vessels, with plain head and square stern, originally developed as lateen-rigged coastal fishing vessels in Medieval Portugal, but eventually used as exploratory vessels in Iberian voyages to the New World in the late 15th and early 16th centuries; vessels of exploration were often square-rigged for more efficient ocean-going travel.[en]
< fartøy etter skrogmateriale